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What happens when confidence slips, not in a stock or a sector, but in the money itself? We dig into the hard data behind gold’s blast past $5,000 and silver’s record surge, and we connect those moves to a broader shift away from the dollar. Sanctions blowback, a stumbling tariff regime, and mounting debt questions have combined into a quiet but powerful de-dollarization trend—one that central banks have been preparing for by holding more gold than Treasuries.
By Tony Arterburn4.9
2727 ratings
What happens when confidence slips, not in a stock or a sector, but in the money itself? We dig into the hard data behind gold’s blast past $5,000 and silver’s record surge, and we connect those moves to a broader shift away from the dollar. Sanctions blowback, a stumbling tariff regime, and mounting debt questions have combined into a quiet but powerful de-dollarization trend—one that central banks have been preparing for by holding more gold than Treasuries.

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