When you actually try to fight inflation, the economy melts down because we financialized the whole system. Asset bubbles have become such a huge part of the economy and the economic growth function that once they collapse, the entire economy falters. So that's that's the dynamic that you're watching News Daily. Subscribe for more. The lies are starting to catch up with them. And Michael Pento says when the truth finally breaks through, it's not just the Fed that's going to burn. The entire
foundation of the dollar could collapse under the weight of its own deception. For years, the Federal Reserve has sold the fantasy that they can print trillions, suppress rates, and juggle an exploding debt without consequence. But that illusion is cracking. And what comes next could be a financial firestorm unlike anything we've seen. As confidence in fiat money evaporates and the true cost of endless debt comes due, one asset is primed to rise from the ashes. Silver. The same silver that's
been overlooked, suppressed, and dismissed is now on the verge of its biggest breakout ever. Because when hyperinflation takes hold and the dollar spirals into oblivion, silver won't just survive, it'll lead the charge. So what exactly is the Fed hiding? And how does silver become the escape hatch from this economic nightmare? Let's pull back the curtain and find out. So, so the Bureau of Economic Analysis um reports uh the GDP numbers and uh they are they are both reported real and
in nominal terms. So when I'm when I talk GDP, the Atlanta Fed has real GDP at minus 1.8% for Q1. Um, and I think that's probably closer to the truth where we're going to see n annual growth, real growth of zero, close to 0% this year of real growth. Um, so uh due to tariffs, due to thank God finally shutting the border down, so we we have, you know, we have no we no longer just letting everybody in this country. We don't have any idea if they're terrorists, if they're whatever.
We we now have um border closures which is a contraction in labor force growth. That's half of GDP growth. So you have that and the tariffs. You have you have liquidity the the massive $6 trillion of liquidity that was created by the central bank postco is now running is finally running dry. See reserves in the system are coming down. The reverse repo facility is from 2.5 trillion 2.2 trillion down to basically zero. The Treasury General account is down to about a half a billion dollars. Um, a
half a trillion dollars, sorry, not a half a billion. Um, banks are now tightening lending standards. The real Fed funds rate has been positive for over two years. Um, so these are the re these are the liquidity metrics that I look at to show me that we might have a real serious problem not just with disinflation, which I think is a wonderful thing, especially when you're going from nine to three. that that's wonderful. But disinflation could morph into deflation and a contraction in asset prices. You
know, you have a profound reverse wealth effect now hitting this country. Um, home prices are starting to roll over on a month-to-month month basis nationally. I mean, I live I live in Naples, Florida. I have a house in New Jersey. I have a house in New Jersey that I was told was some number and I've lowered it by 10% and I still can't sell it. That's New Jersey. in Florida. You had a great anecdote, but every single day in my community, the homes listed are not selling and they have price reductions
on a daily basis. Some home will lower their price and they're not moving yet. So you think about all these people that were geniuses when they borrowed money at 3%. And then they bought an investment property and rented it out to somebody and the home price was going up 20% peranom and they were all geniuses. Donigan, but then when you have a recession and the renter stops paying you and the home price begins to roll over, you're up 100% on this house in the last few years, right? and and you and you and you don't have
to move, Donigan. You just you just call the real Hey, get get rid of that house. I don't have to change my address. I don't have to buy new furniture. I don't have to do anything. I just I just call my realtor and sell the house. There's a there's there's a tsunami of investment. It sounds like something out of a dystopian novel. But this is the financial reality we're living in. America is adding 1 trillion in debt every 100 days. Let that sink in. According to Bank of America, that's
over 3.6 trillion a year. A pace so reckless it defies logic. But this isn't just about numbers. It's about trust. Every trillion tacked onto the balance sheet weakens the global faith in the US dollar. And as that trust erodess, so too does the value of the currency itself. That's why silver, once considered the poor man's gold, is now being eyed as a lifeboat in a storm of fiscal insanity. Because unlike the dollar, silver can't be printed. And when governments lose control of their
spending, hard assets don't just hold value, they soar. The debt debasement trade is no longer a fringe theory. It's going mainstream. Investors are rushing into anything that can shield them from the coming flood. Gold, Bitcoin, and yes, silver. But what makes this moment different is the speed. The pace of debt accumulation has become a warning siren for anyone paying attention. And if silver reacts the way it has during previous debt spirals, we could be looking at the early stages of a
historic surge. Full force blah blah. Let's talk about the Fed put for a second if you don't mind. The the Fed put I mean I'm pretty sure we had a central bank, a fully functional central bank in the year 2000, right? The Fed the Federal Reserve took interest rates from 6 and a half in in 2001 down to 1% by 2002. Did that stop the NASDAQ from going down 80%. No. No. No. Did it stop the the the S&P from falling 50%. No. No, it didn't. So, let's fast forward to 2008. Uh the Fed started cutting rates
from 5 and a/4% in December of 2007. Took him down to 0%. 0%. Did that stop the S&P 500 from losing 57% of its value? No. No. Did it stop home prices from dropping 33% nationally? No, it did not. So, what Fed put are they talking about? The Fed always acts based on lagging economic data that's reported a month behind. So, you have you have inflation that was created postco that led to record high inflation in this country. And the Fed is saying, "Oh, you know, well, we we kind of have
an inflation problem, but if they were actually forwardthinking, now I don't want them to do this." Well, I listen, I prefer that the Eckles building closes doors. I'm just saying if they actually had models that work, they would be ahead of these bust cycles, these disinflationary and deflationary cycles. But they are not. And it's the same thing is going to happen again. Fed will be acting to pump up asset prices after the market's down 20%, but it'll be too late because monetary
policy works with a lag. And like I said, now the next time the Fed takes interest rates to zero, and they will, the next time they undertake QE, and they will, the next time the Treasury and the Fed get together and send out, you know, legions of helicopters to to bring checks to people, helicopter money, and they will. I have no doubt. Where do you think inflation's going to end up then? Because who's going to believe them that they actually have any plan or ability to control inflation?
When you actually try to fight inflation, the economy melts down because we financialized the whole system. Asset prices have become such a huge huge part asset bubbles have become such a huge part of the economy and the economic growth function that once they collapse the entire economy falters. So that's that's the dynamic that we have. The problem isn't just the debt. It's what that debt is doing to the very instruments the system relies on. US treasuries, once considered the
safest asset in the world, are starting to look toxic. As interest payments balloon and supply floods the market, the government is finding it harder to sell its own IUS. That's a dangerous place to be because the Treasury market isn't just another corner of finance. It's the bedrock. If trust in treasuries breaks, the ripple effects will be catastrophic. Michael Pento has been warning that when buyers start to vanish, the Fed will be forced to step in again, printing more money to absorb
the debt, fueling the very inflation they claim to be fighting. It's a vicious cycle with no offramp. And for everyday savers, that means more purchasing power erosion, more instability, and more urgency to escape the system. That's where silver comes in. It's not just an inflation hedge. It's a confidence hedge. Because when belief in government debt dies, people don't flock to paper promises. They rush to what's real. And silver in this new era of crumbling trust is starting to
look like the most real thing there is. hear talk some of the talking heads on CNBS at all and they they they they say well you know inflation is not a problem because real incomes are positive and I I I thought wait a second so incomes are rising faster than inflation according to many talking heads and many associated with big banks on Wall Street and Federal Reserve officials. And then you brought up a great point and I' and I've written about this. So, okay, um maybe some people's salaries on a on a median basis
are keeping up with inflation, but what about the 7 whatever million people who are retired in this country? Are their incomes keeping up with inflation? And what about all those people who are undermployed or working for minimum wage? the millions upon millions of people who are not keeping up with inflation like you said, people are having to sell their homes because home affordability is at a record low level. And that that's all laid at the feet at Mr. Powell. Everything we do is in the
service of the middle class of the of Americans. No, that is a lie. And I think he knows better. And we all know better now. If you thought before you're listening to this podcast that that was the case, how is it how is it then that home affordability is at a record low? How is it that real incomes for most Americans are plunging and have plunged? It's because the destruction of the purchasing power of the currency has gone in in in overdrive started it started really in 2000. You can even go back to 1987 but
and went into overdrive global financial crisis post the global financial crisis and then exco postco and it doesn't look like it's slowing down because we have we have central bankers who still maintain that they've done a great job with bringing the second derivative of inflation down from the way they measure 9 to three but in reality it's gone from 20 to to 8 and it's still eviscerating Michael Pento doesn't mince words. He's calling it what it is, hyperinflation
doom. And he's not alone. As the Federal Reserve keeps pretending it can walk a tight rope between endless debt and stable prices, the dollar is silently bleeding out. This isn't just inflation. It's the early stages of a full-blown monetary breakdown. The signs are everywhere. Soaring asset prices, record deficits, and a central bank that talks tough but folds the moment markets flinch. The Fed says it's in control, but its credibility is unraveling fast. And when a central bank loses credibility,
confidence collapses and inflation takes off like wildfire. That's why silver is positioned to do something extraordinary. Unlike fiat currencies, silver doesn't depend on trust in central planners. It doesn't need a committee to assign its value. It just is. And when people realize the dollars in their pocket are buying less by the week, they won't look for answers. They'll look for exits. That's when silver becomes more than just a commodity. It becomes survival. And in a
world where the Fed's lies have laid the groundwork for monetary chaos, silver could become the last honest measure of wealth left standing. They signed the continuing resolution, which keeps spending at the same level it was it was last year. So where are the cut where done again? Where are the cuts? You know the February deficit was two times revenue. An an incredible phenomenon. So it's 200% of revenue in one month. And that's the spending you want to keep in place. Just it's just mindboggling. Oh,
can I just before I forget? I hope I don't forget but so I won't for in case I do forget which I probably would. I have to mention this. So, so we had a little bit of a a comedy show when the the the Federal Open Market Committee had their March meeting yesterday, right? So, Jerome Powell's uh has this projections of when he's going to get to this number and when he's going to get to that, which always he projects he's going to get his he's going to achieve his inflation target sometime in
2027. And that would mean that the Fed would be north of 2% above its 2% target for six years. And then and using that cookbooks and then I said to myself, wait a second. So the so he says everything we do is in the in the responsibility and the pursuit of happiness and the joy of the middle class and blah blah blah. That's what he always says. You know some that was my that was my paraphrase. All we do, every every function, everything we every thought process is to how how we benefit the middle class
of the United States and the poor and and and to keep prices stable, blah blah blah. And then he says he's not going to reach his inflation target for six years. And here's the punch here's the punch line in the joke. And he's he's in a rate cutting cycle. So wait a second. I mean, why why is it that you know, I'm not invited to any of those meetings, Dunigan, as you know. Heck, you're not you're not even invited on the mainstream media anymore, Michael. You might as well give up on being invited
to the Fit Open Market Committee. No, really not. I mean, new newsmax and may occasionally on Fox News, but not really. But so, so the next question from the next reporter is like, Mr. Powell, Mr. Powell, you said you're not going to reach your target for six years, your inflation target for six years. Why are you in a rate cutting cycle? The market movements, the chatter in hedge fund. That would be the only question that he's ever been asked. Nobody even paid attention to that. The dollar is on. Sorry, that's my that's my
rant. And when that final crack forms, when the illusion finally shatters, silver won't just react, it'll explode. Because while gold has taken the spotlight as the traditional safe haven, silver is still trading far below its all-time highs. Massively undervalued and overlooked. That's the edge. That's the opportunity. As Michael Pento points out, when the public finally understands that the Fed has no tools left, only excuses, they'll scramble for protection. And they won't all be able
to afford gold. And that's when silver enters its sweet spot. It's accessible, liquid, and poised for violent upside. It's not just about investors anymore. This is becoming a survival strategy. As the dollar collapses under its own weight, people will rush to assets that don't lie. Silver doesn't promise yield. It doesn't require faith. It simply holds value. And when the trust in fiat vanishes, silver becomes the currency of last resort. This isn't some abstract theory. It's a repeat of history playing
out in real time. Right. Well, the if so the so it's the U3 and U6 is what that is what you're talking about. his measurements of various ways of measuring unemployment. But listen, if everybody stopped looking for work because they gave up because they couldn't find it, the unemployment rate would be zero. That's the way they that's the way they calculate it. So, um, but supposedly being told that we're not in a recession and the unemployment rate is historically low, but why do we
have $2 trillion in deficits? Why do we have 36 you 36 trillion almost $ 37 trillion in in debt? And you talking I'm not talking about unfined line of liabilities. Talking about just debt outstanding 123% plus of GDP. When you have those kind of numbers, the central bank really isn't looking out for you. They're trying to keep the federal government solvent. And that's why we're are that's why we have inflation. It's the government's an extremely horrible uh distributor of capital.
They create imbalances in the economy. That's what they do. You know, the government doesn't have any money. The government has nothing. They steal the money from you or they borrow money that is printed by the Federal Reserve and private banks. That's how the system works. And that's why we have now an intractable problem with debt and thus an intractable problem with inflation. And the only benefit we're going to have from fall, we might see a recession which brings interest rates
down temporarily, but I God help us, Dunigan, on the other side of the next recession when the deficit is going to rise close to $6 trillion. That's an annual budget deficit. That's that's my estimate based on prior recessions and the effect on the annual deficit. Could you imagine that? $6 trillion. So coming out of I'm going to talk about the Fed put for a second. So everybody now say, well, you know, the Fed has your back. The Fed is your the Fed is put is in the debt debasement
trade isn't some fringe concept anymore. It's going mainstream and fast. Bank of America's own strategists are pointing to it as one of the hottest trends in markets right now. Gold and Bitcoin are already flying and the spotlight is slowly starting to shift towards silver. But here's what makes silver different. It's still in stealth mode. While gold grabs headlines and crypto dominates the news cycle, silver is quietly gathering momentum, primed to deliver asymmetric returns. It's the most underappreciated
piece of this monetary reset puzzle. And for those who understand how these cycles work, that's where the real profit is made. Because by the time silver becomes the headline, the easy money will already be gone. Michael Pento knows this. He's not just reacting to what's happening today. He's anticipating the title wave that's coming. As investors crowd into any asset that can protect against the Fed's fiscal arson, silver is next in line to benefit from this shift in capital. And
when the debt to basement trade peaks, silver won't just play catchup. It could steal the whole show. Houses going to flood the market. Don't forget these houses that you think you have a 100% paper gain on, you've been paying taxes and insurance and maintenance maintenance costs. So, when they there's a totally different calculation for the investor when they say, I I'm okay with these massive taxes, right? You can't homestead an investment property in Florida. So, just so you re read, So,
you're paying the you're paying the higher taxes, you're paying the insurance, you're paying the maintenance costs, and it makes sense to do that when the home price is going up 20%. Not when it's falling and you're no longer getting a rental income. So, the we reverse wealth effect from home prices, which are finally rolling over and the fact that the S&P 500 is down and the NASDAQ is down on the year and depending what you own. If you own high the high volatility sectors like Bitcoin, you're
even down even more. So, um you have the reverse wealth effect. So, I think GDP in real terms could be closer to zero this year. And when you have a GDP close to zero, even though it's not might not might not be I'm going to say it's not going to be a recession, even though it might not be a recession, it's very hard to get earnings growth of 12%. That's what Wall Street projects when you have GDP that's flat. It's very hard unless you get a tax cut, which you're
not getting. The best you're going to get this year on the corporate level is uh stasis. It'll be the same tax rate. So, how you going to get 11% earnings growth when the consumer on all cohorts, not even the bottom four quintiles, all five quintiles are now pulling back on their spending. Um, so that means that the stock market is fully valued and in and still in danger of dropping 10 20% this year if there's no recession and much more if there is one like maybe 40%. And the Fed put, as I just proved
to you, is a figment of the imagination of Wall Street banks. It does not exist because the Fed always acts in a rears. 2025 isn't going to be about guessing anymore. It's going to be about reacting. This year marked the end of speculation and the beginning of reality. No more waiting for elections. No more guessing central bank moves. The time for pretending is over. The Fed is already in the middle of its rate cutting cycle and the market knows it. What comes next are the consequences.
Real policy, real impact, and that's where the true volatility begins. Michael Pento warns that when the mask drops and the world sees the Fed for what it is, a political tool, not a financial safeguard, confidence in the entire system could collapse in an instant. And silver, it thrives in that chaos. Because while equities get hammered by policy shocks and currencies get shaken by geopolitical fallout, silver stands apart. It doesn't need growth or good news. It needs dysfunction. And
2025 is setting up to deliver just that. For the first time in years, silver isn't just riding the wave of inflation fear. It's positioned to surge on the back of real unavoidable systemic breakdowns. So then again, so here's the here's that's a beautiful quote by Martin Love Mart Thatcher, right? You know, good friends with Ronald Reagan, both great individuals. Um, so the zeitgeist of today is you as you listen to um CNBS, they'll tell you uh you'll hear everybody says the same thing.
Well, if only the government would stimulate, we need the government to stimulate. Germany is going to rack up the debt right now. They're going to, you know, forget about fiscal prudence in in Germany. They're gonna borrow trillions of euros and build up their defense. And that's supposed to bring out, you know, that's supposed to engender record growth and prosperity forever and ever. Amen. But, you know, when government does this because they have no money, they're borrowing it from
you. No, they don't really do they don't really borrow from you. They're not robbing pro they don't really rob private sector savings. Um, they don't tax it. They're not raising taxes. They do it with with fiscal deficits. they borrow it from central banks. So in the in the long run it kills productivity and it creates intractable inflation. That's the example all even in Germany in Wimar Germany that is what they did. They borrow tons of money in World War I and they try to buy it to pay it all back by
printing money. I can't think of a bigger government stimulus plan, a a a more perfect stimulus package than war. It's the most asinine way to spend money. It's the most destructive, evil, wasteful way to spend money. That's what government does. And and at the end, you have intractable inflation and depression. That is what you get when you stimulate by deficit spending. This is where the illusion fully begins to unravel. When markets shift from expectation to reaction, the damage
isn't slow, it's violent, and the ripple effect doesn't stay contained to one asset class. As the Fed's credibility disintegrates, the AROT begins to spread. Equity markets propped up by cheap money and blind hope start to wobble. Credit markets already stretched thin by junk grade borrowing begin to seize. But the biggest threat, contagion, a slow motion collapse of trust that sweeps through every corner of the financial system. Michael Pento sees it like this. Once the public realizes the Fed can't fix what it
broke, fear replaces faith. And in a fear-driven market, liquidity vanishes and investors flee fast. That's when silver becomes more than a hedge. It becomes a shelter. Look at what's happening already. Investors are rotating out of tech darlings and speculative equities. Hedge funds are trimming risk. The Treasury market, once untouchable, is now flashing warning signs. Volatility indexes are creeping up. And at the center of it all is a central bank that's run out of moves. Their tools, rate cuts, bond
purchases, forward guidance, don't work when no one believes the narrative anymore. And when the narrative breaks, capital doesn't stay in paper. It runs to what's tangible. That's why silver is perfectly positioned. It's not just an inflation story anymore. It's a systemic trust story. Silver doesn't need QE. It doesn't need a strong dollar. It doesn't even need economic growth. What it needs is exactly what we're walking into. Instability, broken faith, and a mass
realization that the game is rigged. This is isn't just a bull case for silver. It's a survival case. In a market where the center no longer holds, the only assets that matter are the ones you can actually touch. And silver, unlike tech stocks or treasury bonds, doesn't vanish in a crisis. It shines. Well, I think it's one of the same thing. So, I took down the exposure in the portfolio uh in late December of 24. One of the reasons why I did so is because of the prospects of uh the government shutting down.
And we saw Chuck Schumer doing about face. You know, one day I it was like Thursday he said or or Wednesday or Thursday of last week, we're going to shut the government down and then Friday we're going to keep it open. Well, shutting the government down, you know, there's a lot less spending when the government shuts down. And that and that is and that directly feeds into the model. So, uh, when he did his about face, um, guess what? I I took my shorts off the portfolio. I was I had I had one short,
an anti-beta play, actually. Um, and I do have I still have a short in the in junk bonds, but I I I went slightly longer and I took off some some short exposure, the anti-BA exposure, because I thought we might have a bounce heading into the end of the usual paint the tape end of month, which is now the end of the quarter. So, I'm less bearish right now, but I I I can tell you all the reasons why I think this is a very short-lived reprieve. The smart money never waits for headlines. It moves in
silence. And right now, behind the noise of meme stocks, crypto rallies, and speculative distractions, institutions are quietly positioning themselves in silver. It's not retail investors driving this next wave. It's funds, family offices, and macro strategists who see what's coming. and are preparing before the panic hits. Michael Pento has warned that by the time the public realizes the dollar is in freef fall, silver will already be halfway through its move. And the numbers back him up.
Premiums on physical silver are widening. Inventories are thinning and ETF inflows, especially into funds that track physical silver rather than futures contracts, are picking up pace. But this isn't about a small move. Institutions aren't looking for a 10% hedge. They're bracing for a paradigm shift. Because when you look at the broader financial landscape, rising geopolitical tensions, crumbling trust and sovereign debt, and a Fed caught between inflation and recession, the conclusion is clear. The dollar can't be
saved without triggering a collapse somewhere else. And silver, it doesn't carry counterparty risk. It doesn't rely on government promises. That's why it's becoming a core allocation for those who manage real capital. This silent accumulation phase is the calm before the storm. The same institutions that mocked silver for years are now buying quietly, knowing that when the break comes, liquidity will vanish and premiums will spike. They're not chasing, they're positioning. Because
once silver starts to run, trying to buy it will be like trying to board a train that's already at full speed. And if history is any guide, the breakout will come fast, brutal, and without warning. and derivative stability, but you're still destroying the purchase of the of the dollar. So the stable prices, that's what the Fed 1913 charter said, you know, full employment, stable prices, stable prices. Stable prices in my definition of stable is zero% inflation. But they've tacidly
admitted that they that that 3% is okay. That's where inflation is right now. Core inflation is three is 3%. That's okay. But it's not 3% because it's, as you said, it's 3% the way they measure it. If you measure it, you know, like they did in the 80s, it's closer to 8%. So, we don't have we don't have stable prices. And somehow this gentleman thinks that he could proaricate and and obfuscate to the American public and tell them how they're protecting the value of the
dollar. No, you're not. You're not protecting the value of anything but the the the value of banks assets on their balance sheet. That's what you're That's what you're protecting, Jerome. And you're not fooling me, and you're aren't fooling Dunigan. And you're not fooling anybody listening to this. The only thing you care about is keeping asset prices inflating so they don't erode in value. So banks balance sheets appear to be Michael Pento's warnings aren't
predictions. They're postmortems delivered early. He's not speculating on what might go wrong. He's laying out exactly what is going wrong right now. The Fed's playbook is out of pages and their credibility is deteriorating by the day. They've boxed themselves in, caught between raising rates to tame inflation and cutting them to avoid a recession they helped create. Either path leads to destruction. And in both scenarios, silver wins. If they keep rates high, the debt spiral
accelerates. The government's interest payments explode. Confidence in US treasuries erodess further and the entire bond market starts to convulse. If they cut rates, inflation reignites. The dollar weakens, purchasing power collapses, and capital rushes into hard assets. Silver doesn't care which poison the Fed picks. It benefits from both. That's the core of Pento's thesis. The trap has already been sprung. It's no longer about preventing collapse. It's about surviving it. He points to
historical echoes like the stagflationary 1970s where silver shot up 3,000% or the 2011 debt crisis rally where silver nearly hit 50. Except this time the backdrop is worse. The debt is higher, the deficits are deeper, and the public trust in institutions is at a breaking point. And yet silver still sits massively undervalued. That disconnect won't last. When fear overtakes complacency, silver won't just climb, it'll erupt. Because this isn't just a financial storm, it's a collapse in confidence. And silver is
about to become the medal of truth in a world built on lies. Why did they do that? I mean, I don't think they they I don't think it's nefarious in nature. Um the the reason why central banks have an inflation target, the reason why the Federal Reserve took the amount of high-powered money or the think about it as the Fed's balance sheet from 700 billion um in the prior to the global financial crisis to over $9 trillion. The reason why they did all that is because government spending is out of control.
So if if the if the Fed or any central bank didn't increase the amount of base money supply or highowered money and that didn't allow private banks to monetize the debt, they they you know the Fed monetizes government debt and uses private banks as a conduit to do so. Okay? They they create reserves. Reserves are given to banks. Banks use the reserves to buy bonds and it's a vicious cycle. And and the reason why they do that is because the government spending is out of control. And we have a $2 trillion
deficit in good times. There's no recession right now supposedly, right? Unemployment rate is is is historically very low. But we have we have a national debt. It's 123% of GDP. When trust disappears from a financial system, there are only two places left to run. gold and silver. And while gold has already started its move, silver is still crouching before the leap. Michael Pento sees it as inevitable. Not a bet, not a hope, but a mathematical certainty. The Fed's lies have backed the dollar into a corner, and the
fallout from that deception will not be subtle. It'll be historic. We're entering a time where belief in fiat currencies will shatter. And when it does, silver won't just catch up. It'll blow past every expectation. This isn't about charts or technical analysis anymore. It's about a complete reset in how people think about money. And silver, with its perfect storm of industrial demand, monetary history, and scarcity, is poised to become the centerpiece of that reset. The world is sleepwalking into a
currency crisis. But you don't have to. The warning signs are here, the cracks are widening, and silver is offering a lifeline before the masses catch on. So, if you found value in this breakdown, make sure to subscribe so you don't miss what's coming next. And remember, this is not financial advice. Always speak with a licensed professional before making any investment decisions.
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