Schiff and Rickards agree that gold is reclaiming its monetary role and forecast $10,000 gold and $100 silver, with central banks now net buyers since 2010, Russia going from 600 to 2,400 tons, China officially at ~2,800 tons, and Morgan Stanley advising clients to shift a 60/40 portfolio to 60/20/20 by selling half their bonds for gold. They diverge sharply on the endgame: Schiff predicts a dollar crisis, hyperinflation, and a U.S. debt default (explicit or via inflation) given $38 trillion in debt, $3 trillion deficits, and Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” preserving Biden-era spending, while Rickards sees deflation, 1% rates, a “long depression” since 2007, and a workable 3-3-3 Bessent plan (3% deficits, 3% real growth, 3 million extra barrels of oil) to grow out of the debt-to-GDP ratio. Both view tariffs, Fed independence destruction under Trump, the petrodollar’s origin (including a leaked 1974 plan to invade Saudi Arabia’s eastern province), and the yen carry trade as critical pressure points, with Rickards adding that the COMEX would halt physical delivery in a squeeze because “gold never settles.”
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Central bank gold accumulation and the dollar’s reserve erosion: Central banks have been net buyers since 2010, hold more gold than U.S. Treasuries for the first time in decades, and 95% expect their gold reserves to grow over the next 12 months; China’s dollar-denominated reserves fell from 60% in 2016 to 25% today, while Russia’s gold stash (~$150 billion) survived sanctions that froze $300 billion in Treasuries.
Schiff vs. Rickards on the endgame — hyperinflation vs. deflation: Schiff argues 10% rates on $40 trillion debt would consume 80% of tax revenue, forcing the Fed to monetize and triggering a currency run, while Rickards counters that the Fed is “impotent and irrelevant” because velocity has crashed, predicts the 10-year yield falls toward 3% in a recession, and says Bessent’s 3-3-3 plan mirrors the 1945–1980 playbook that cut debt-to-GDP from 114% to 31% through nominal growth, not repayment.
The tariff fight — who actually pays: Schiff insists tariffs are excise taxes passed to U.S. consumers (citing French shorts pulled from sale and skyrocketing soccer jersey prices) and calls them unconstitutional because revenue bills must originate in the House, while Rickards argues the cost gets pushed back up the supply chain (citing a Hong Kong sneaker manufacturer told by Walmart to absorb a 3% yuan devaluation within 15 minutes) and projects nearly $1 trillion in annual tariff revenue.
COMEX, LBMA, and the “gold never settles” problem: Rickards reveals Blythe Masters’ three-word admission that paper gold claims exceed physical by an estimated 100-to-1 or 500-to-1, exchanges have rules allowing them to force “trade for liquidation only” rather than deliver, and the U.S. Treasury likely cannot sell its 8,133 tons because of a Fifth Amendment covenant tied to the Fed’s gold certificate booked at $42/oz.
Price targets and the silver breakout: Both forecast $10,000 gold (Rickards says possibly in 2026 because each $1,000 increment becomes a smaller percentage move — 9 to 10 is only 11%), Schiff calls for $100 silver after it broke the 1980 Hunt Brothers $50 high and is up over 90% this year, mining stocks have doubled while gold is up 60%, and Tether is now buying more gold than many central banks.