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Top Three Videos – May 6, 2026

Is the dollar dying or quietly tightening its grip? Will silver really hit $300? Can the US end the Iran war on its terms? This roundup summarizes four in-depth interviews from May 2026 covering dollar swap lines and stablecoins, the silver and gold bull market, Bill White on financial repression and the coming bond crisis, and CSIS analyst Jon Alterman on why Iran’s leadership won’t capitulate despite Operation Epic Fury. Key topics include Kevin Warsh’s Fed transition, Japan’s debt trap under PM Takaichi, China’s strategic calculus, and the $120 oil shock.

William White: Former BIS Chief Economist Reveals Why Central Banks Trapped Themselves...(May 3, 2026)

Gold Repubic Global...

Summary

 

White argues we are undergoing a regime change — not a personnel change with Powell handing off to Kevin Warsh on May 15th, but a recognition that monetary policy has reached its limits and central banks are trapped after encouraging excessive borrowing through years of low rates. He contends the world is shifting from disinflationary forces (favorable demographics, cheap fossil fuels, globalization) to inflationary ones, layered on top of what he calls “the biggest energy price shock the world has ever known” with Brent above $120 and the IMF estimating every 10% oil rise adds 0.5 percentage points to CPI. He predicts financial repression — letting inflation rise faster than expected while suppressing rates administratively — is the likely endgame, frames stablecoins as a problem rather than a solution because they’re privately created promises that can be broken, and warns the sequence will likely follow 2008/9: a private debt crisis triggers government bailouts, which require monetary financing, which produces the inflation that financial repression then “manages.”

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

The debt trap and the regime change: US fiscal deficit at full employment is still 6% of GDP with no political will to address it, France faces gilet jaunes pressure, and advanced country debt-to-GDP sits at record post-WWII levels but with much higher rates making it “unstoppable.” White argues central banks can do liquidity but not solvency, and the arithmetic of the primary surplus required to stabilize debt is so large that markets eventually conclude it’s impossible — at which point yields spike and worsen the problem.

 

Energy shock and supply chain specialization: White calls the Iran war energy shock “the biggest the world has ever known” in absolute terms, with oil moving from $60 to $120 implying roughly a 4% CPI hit if the IMF rule holds, and Qatari gas production possibly taking five years to fully replace. His deeper concern is hyper-specialization — citing how 90% of car-paint hardening rosin came from one Japanese factory hit by the tsunami — meaning oil-and-gas-derived inputs like fertilizer, sulfur, and helium can halt entire production chains.

 

Stablecoins versus CBDCs as financial repression: White sides with the European preference for central bank digital currencies over the American push for private stablecoins under the Genius Act, arguing stablecoins are private promises that can be broken and that demand for them likely just drains bank deposits rather than adding net Treasury demand. He sees the Karim Khan ICC sanctions case — where the chief judge lost access to Dutch bank accounts — as the kind of episode that drives Europe toward a digital euro, and floats the deeper “Chicago school” idea of using CBDCs as a stalking horse for narrow banking that would strip commercial banks’ ability to create money.

 

Japan as the canary and the global repatriation risk: The Bank of Japan now holds over 50% of JGBs in massive financial repression, and new PM Sanae Takaichi has already increased the deficit and ruled out a planned VAT increase on food despite a stated debt-to-GDP target. White warns that if Japan pressures its private sector — which holds the world’s largest net foreign asset position — to repatriate funds and buy JGBs, it would push global long rates higher and make tightening even harder for the US, echoing Russell Napier’s concerns.

 

The dollar, MBridge, and gold as cash: While the dollar still has substantial support, White flags that the Mar-a-Lago plan’s hint of restructuring into 100-year zero-coupon bonds amounts to a form of default, and that the BIS-incubated MBridge platform — backed by China, the HKMA, and Gulf countries — could cut FX costs by 80-90% per McKinsey and bypass the 95% of currency exchanges currently routed through the dollar, especially attractive to countries that watched Russia get cut from SWIFT. He treats gold as “cash” in real terms and dismisses Bitcoin as “none of the above” against the classical money definitions.

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Michael Oliver: Holy Cow! SILVER Price To Explode To $500...THIS SUMMER?!...(May 3, 2026)

CapitalCOSM...

Summary

 

Oliver argues silver is in a midpoint shakeout congestion zone — not a top — after surging from $58 last December to a $120 peak before collapsing back to the low $70s, and he predicts silver will reach $300 to $500 by sometime this summer in a rapid, non-incremental move. He contends silver has been artificially capped at $50 across both 1980 and 2011 while gold, copper, and lead all broke through their old highs, citing that silver is currently only 1.6% of the gold price versus 6.5% in 1980 and 3.1% in 2011, and that on his momentum spread charts silver broke out of a 10-year base versus gold last November. He frames the broader setup as a coming US Treasury bond market crisis (echoing Jamie Dimon’s recent warnings), with the Fed already buying bonds since November under Williams’ “liquidity” justification, the stock market in a topping process, and gold acting as the truest “cash” — recommending readers stay heavy in silver and silver miners (preferring SIL over GDX) until summer, then rotate into gold bullion.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

Silver to $300-$500 by summer: Oliver issued three major silver buy signals — March 2024 at $26, June 2025 at just below $35, and November 2024’s close at $56 — and argues silver’s current 1.6% ratio to gold versus 3.1% in 2011 and 6.5% in 1980 implies the price could double relative to gold quickly. He cites copper’s 2005 breakout from its decades-long $0.50-$1.50 range (quadrupling in two quarters) as the template for how a long-suppressed metal repriices violently rather than gradually.

 

The bond market is the real crisis: T-bond futures prices crashed from 180-190 in 2020 to 117.5 by October 2022 and have gone sideways with elevated yields ever since, with the Fed buying bonds since November under New York Fed President Williams’ “liquidity” framing — yet prices have continued declining. Oliver agrees with Jamie Dimon that a debt crisis is coming and notes Morgan Stanley’s CIO recently shifted from a 60/40 to a 60/20/20 allocation with the 20% specifically in gold rather than Treasuries.

 

Stock market topping process and capital rotation: Gold broke out of a 10-year base versus the S&P 500 last October, signaling institutional money has already begun rotating from equities into monetary metals, and Oliver expects an S&P decline to trigger between April-July as topping processes are typically laborious year-long affairs (like 2000, 2007, 2011) rather than sudden crashes. The Bloomberg Commodity Index broke out at 10650 last October and is now at 140, ahead of the eventual stock decline.

 

CPI as a lagging reflection of monetary inflation: Oliver dismisses the 3.2% CPI print as merely a reflection of inflation rather than inflation itself, defining true inflation as money supply growth — citing M2’s roughly 80% expansion per decade explaining how houses went from $4,500 (granddad) to $45,000 (dad) to $450,000. He argues the Fed will be forced to abandon its inflation mandate to defend the bond market, just as Japan’s new PM pledged to “print to defend that piece of paper.”

 

Silver miners over gold miners and headline trading traps: Oliver’s spread chart of SIL versus GDX broke out of a multi-year basing pattern last quarter and continues surging, justifying overweighting silver miners. He warns against trading on war headlines, noting the Russia-Ukraine war started in February 2022 with oil at $130 and Bloomberg at 140 before commodities collapsed, and cautions that anyone who chased oil into the $90s on Iran headlines after his $65 January buy signal will get “gut-kicked” when Iran sees a street uprising he expects could end the conflict in 48 hours.

Jon Alterman: How China Is Winning the Iran War...(May 1, 2026)

Hidden Forces...

Summary

 

Alterman argues the US and Israel fundamentally underestimated Iranian “grit, determination, and range of tools” before launching Operation Epic Fury on February 28th, with the decapitation strategy of killing Iran’s entire leadership cadre — something the US has never previously done to another country — failing to produce political capitulation despite roughly 20,000 targets struck. He contends modern war has accelerated militarily but not politically, and that Iran has many tools in reserve (cyber, proxies, embedded terror cells) while the Strait of Hormuz closure has demonstrated that even a weakened Iran can shut global shipping at will, potentially forcing a payment-for-passage settlement that undermines freedom of navigation worldwide. Alterman frames Iran’s predicament as one where revolutionary anti-American hostility is a founding principle of the regime and where the IRGC and clerical foundations actively profit from sanctions-evasion smuggling, meaning the bad actors have a vested interest in pariah status — and he argues China sees the war as “a gift that keeps on giving” that ties down US military assets away from the Western Pacific.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

Why decapitation failed: Alterman compared the strategy to the failed “dirty dozen” theory in Saddam’s Iraq — assuming removing leadership would orient the population correctly — and notes that once you kill the leadership cadre it immediately becomes existential for the survivors, who then escalate maximally. Iran has been preparing tools to compensate for conventional weakness for almost 50 years and views shutting Hormuz as a later-stage option, not an opening move.

 

The speed mismatch between military and political war: Alterman argues the US has gotten “better and better at destroying very specific things quickly” with precise munitions and intelligence, but the political effects war is meant to produce haven’t sped up correspondingly. He observes Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Caine focuses on military actions while political effects are “somebody else’s responsibility,” and warns that visible US urgency to finish quickly signals to adversaries they can simply wait Washington out.

 

Netanyahu’s post-October 7th risk shift and Trump’s instincts: Netanyahu transformed from a historically risk-averse leader (spending five years on the Gilad Shalit prisoner swap) into one taking audacious gambles after October 7th — the pager attack, killing Hassan Nasrallah and Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran during President Raisi’s funeral, defying Biden on Rafah. Alterman says Netanyahu timed his Trump visit when Vice President Vance was out of town to plant the war idea, and Trump — bankrupted six times and emboldened by the successful Soleimani strike at the end of his first term — embraced calculated risk over bureaucratic caution.

 

CENTCOM integration and the Abraham Accords groundwork: The first Trump administration moved Israel from European Command into CENTCOM, recognizing that Israelis and Arabs shared Iran threat perceptions, which deepened US-Israeli intelligence and operational integration over the past year and laid the groundwork for both the June 2024 nuclear strikes and the current war. Alterman is careful not to claim Israel “sucked the US into” the war but says the integration was an important enabling factor.

 

Iran’s pariah political economy and China’s calculus: The IRGC and parastatal foundations make money smuggling around sanctions, the rial sits at 1.5 million to the dollar with massive inflation, and Alterman argues the regime fears that opening up would cause everything to fall apart — making genuine reform unlikely. China represents 30% of Iran’s trade but Iran is less than 1% of China’s, the Saudis export more oil to China than Iran does, and per Alterman’s Foreign Policy piece with Ali Vaez, Beijing sees US entanglement in the Gulf as draining American munitions, exposing US fighting methods, and pulling focus from the Western Pacific — a Biden-style “tie down the adversary far away” play in reverse

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