Grant Williams argues that gold’s pullback to around $4,000 from $5,500 is healthy and unremarkable — gold took 6,000 years to break $3,000, and holders who own it for purchasing-power protection rather than momentum are doing “tremendously well.” He contends the US faces an intractable fiscal trap, spending $1.3 trillion on interest versus a $919 billion defense budget, meaning the Fed cannot raise rates without a debt-servicing crisis nor cut them without unleashing inflation ahead of the November midterms. Williams also declares AI to be in a bubble comparable to the dotcom era, dismisses Bitcoin as an asset he simply doesn’t care about, and says only a full monetary reset — not any price level — would make him liquidate his precious metals.
Gold’s correction is perspective, not disaster: Williams argues gold rocketing from $3,000 to $5,500 was overbought, and holding around $4,000 — a “pipe dream” level for the past 25 years — is incredible. Rick Rule was selling at the highs to “gasps of astonishment,” correctly reading the move as too far, too fast.
When price becomes the story, sell: Williams’ key top signal is when people who don’t care about gold start talking about its price and your parents call asking whether to buy. He advises long-term holders to trim rather than liquidate, keeping dry powder for corrections.
The debt trap and Kevin Warsh’s hawkish surprise: With $1.3 trillion in interest expense (50% more than the $919 billion defense budget), the US needs lower rates, yet new Fed chair Warsh has been unexpectedly hawkish on inflation despite being a Trump appointee. Williams stresses inflation is the imperative issue heading into the November midterms because it’s what votes governments out.
AI is a bubble, like railroads and dotcom: Williams claims the AI capex arms race mirrors the fiber-optic overbuild of Global Crossing, which was written down to pennies on the dollar before enabling cheap internet. He cites Soros and Druckenmiller’s approach: skip the first and last 20% of a bull market and invest in the belly.
IPO frenzy warning via SpaceX: Williams contends insiders IPO when they want to cash out, noting SpaceX was huge only for those who sold into it, while aftermarket buyers are underwater — including Trump memecoin buyers, down 99.9%. He calls buying post-IPO frenzies a lesson that “can’t be taught,” only learned through losses.