look at the true money supply versus ounces of gold or ounces of silver. Really, you're buying it on that ratio almost as cheap as it's ever been. As hard to believe as that is, it's everyone focuses on the price and they're kind of thinking, well, $36 silver today is, you know, like $36 silver 10 years ago, but it is not. Hello everyone. Welcome to Baldu Guy Money and this is a special midweek bonus episode to cover the monumental move up we are potentially looking at right now for both gold and silver as


silver continues to show resilience above the key $35 per ounce level. So to really dig deeper on what's happening right now, I got in touch with someone who I think is one of the best metals experts on the planet. He also happens to be one of the most accurate based on his track record and he is widely revered as an expert on silver trading. He is David Morgan of the Morgan Report which can be found at the Morganreport.com and I had the pleasure of speaking with him last night on very short notice by


the way to deliver information to you all watching this video on the following topics. Starting with how safe are gold and silver in a shaky market right now? Are they really the safe haven that can replace the US dollar? We talked about the Morgan rule for silver price breakouts and if this breakout for silver right now that is happening is confirmed. I asked David what he thinks it would take to stop silver from making a new all-time high in US dollars. We also talked about the gold to silver


ratio, how to use it and how to trade it. And we finish this video off talking about US debt with a little advice to new gold and silver stackers. Now, just before we dive in, please remember to check out www.summitmetals.com to join the growing number of my viewers who are getting on a monthly gold and silver savings schedule using Summit's autoinvest option. You can start by signing up for as little as one gram of gold and 1 ounce of silver per month, which may not sound like much today, but


if done consistently for 15 years, and this is important for everyone 50 years and younger watching this video right now, you can see that an amount of cash that you might not miss every month can be turned into a respectable stack of precious metals providing you with protection that is completely outside of the financial system. Now, without any further ado, here is my discussion with David Morgan. Okay, so here we are with Mr. David Morgan. And as you can tell by the silver color of his beautiful hair,


which you know, I'm a bit jealous of uh there, Mr. Morgan. Uh he has many years of experience in silver. He's a real silver expert. Thank you, David, for coming on Baldy Money. Uh my pleasure. Thank you for having me. First time. I'm looking forward to it. Well, I'm excited to cover a few topics, especially since, you know, obviously silver is breaking out right now. And the first question I want to talk you is to ask you is not 100% connected to that silver breakout, but it is connected to something I


covered in my last YouTube video. And in that video, I highlighted how from February to April of this year, we saw a really noteworthy correction in the S&P 500. I wouldn't necessarily call it a crash, but I think it's fair to call it a noteworthy correction. Now, the common wisdom when it, you know, in the market, the prevailing wisdom is that when the market corrects like that, everything sells off, including precious metals. And the dollar as a result spikes. But this time, we saw everything sell off,


including the dollar, which went from about 108 on the Dixie index, down to below 100 by the end of April. And um the only asset really that bucked the trend was gold. It went up as everything else was coming down. Now my first question to you, Mr. Morgan, is do you think that is a sign that things really are different this time around and that metals are the safest place to be? Definitely. I I a nice outline of what happened. So the only uh push back I'll give you slightly is that the correction was as


you said from April from February to April. So we're looking maybe a two-month. If we had a severe crash like you're looking at you know 20 say 20% within a twow weekek time frame then you'd probably see gold sell off because it is the most liquid asset. most uh traders of substance have it on leverage. Uh so they're going to sell, you know, the winners to pay for the margin calls. But no, fundamentally what you said is critically important. And if you use the extra pyramid, which I'm not


sure you're familiar with. We didn't get to do a big talk before we started recording, but you know, it's a liquidity pyramid is as the depreciation of the currency continues. People, institutions, family offices, pension funds, and the ordinary people strive to find something they trust. Gold and silver are the most trustworthy of everything. Even a dollar bill is not trusted as much as a piece of gold in the long run. So you we have seen a shift. We're seeing that shift as you


displayed. So excellent first question. Thank you. Now just kind of building on that a little bit, do you think that means silver will continue to hold up against market volatility than it has in the past? Because silver has proven to be a little bit more resilient than it than it has in the past. Do you think that's going to continue? Silver will do what it's supposed to do based on its monetary demand. I mean right now the industrial demand somewhere around 60% of the total market. 70% of the market comes for


silver is byproduct metal mining. And so there's 70% of the silver that comes above to the earth's surface uh with that whole group really doesn't even care what silver is worth, what it costs to mine it or anything. It's a byproduct. So they treat it as you know the old expression a red redhaired stepchild. They don't really care. So they'll sell it for an accounting adjustment which is really detrimental to the market and only 25% or thereabouts as a result of primary silver mining. So coming back will


silver resilience be there? I would say yes because where we're going in the future is pretty clear and that's that monetary demand will accelerate for silver like it has for gold and that will continue until it stops. And when is it going to stop? No one knows, but my guess is we've probably got another year or two before we roll over into a new financial system altogether. And when that happens, it's my conjecture that no one really knows if they'll have a tie, it will have a tie to gold or


silver or not. I'm leaning that it will not. Many of my colleagues thinks that, you know, gold will absolutely be in the new monetary system in some way, shape, or form. I'm not convinced yet. Yeah, I think we uh see eye to eye on that and we'll dig into that a bit deeper in a moment. But somebody recently told me about the Morgan rule on X. I was exchanging some messages with somebody and they made me aware of I didn't I didn't know about this rule that you um that that you've come up with and uh


when it comes to measuring a silver breakout confirmation. Now, this is your rule and we are now in the fourth day since silver has broken out above $35 an ounce. What I'd like to ask is what does the Morgan rule dictate and has it been triggered? It has been triggered. So answer the second part first. And this is something I did because I used to trade futures for a living and it's more difficult than people think. But and I learned you know over and over from my mistakes and also from my wins. But I tried after


going to so many courses, options courses, futures scorches courses and many things to try to get better and better and better that the best way to approaches first of all to self be true day trading doesn't bore me. It's too much like a job, but I'm a position trader and I'm good at it. And so I started to come up with these ideas that there's just way too many indicators and really you only need to focus on a couple. And I learned this from a stock course from Bill O'Neal


that started Investors Business Daily years ago. He actually taught the course himself when he first started that publication so many years ago. And it's really it's it's chart patterns, but it's also volume. It's breakouts on volume. And so what I discovered was that you use horizontal lines, not uh channel formations, which most traders use. And on a horizontal basis, if it breaks through a significant level, so resistance, let's say if you're going to go long, it's got to break that barrier.


It's got to maintain above that level on a closeonly basis, it's got to do it three days in a row, and it's got to do it on above average volume. And if those all occur, you have about an 80% probability that trend will continue. And that's called the Morgan rule. And it was really privy to my paid subscribers, my premium members, people that pay me for my, you know, publication on the uh on the equity side. We do ETFs and, you know, I do do it all. Do some futures trading, not much if you're looking for a futures


trader, but do not subscribe because, you know, my last big trade I I was short palladium, long platinum, and that trade was on for over a year, but boy did it make money. So anyway, that's the rule. It has been triggered. Is it perfect? No, but it's darn close to perfect. 80% in any market. And it works for stocks, it works for bonds, works for any market. It's not just silver. It's just that that rule has to be applied. You know, I love to say it's 100%. It's not. But, uh, we are well on


our way in the silver market, and I think we've got a long ways to go, but maybe not as far as many of my colleagues think. Um, markets are going to do what they're going to do. And I know you sent me some of these questions, so I'm going to keep my mouth shut because they're coming up. So carry on, please. Well, okay. So, let's get to the next one then. So, silver has been making new highs in other currencies already versus those 20 those 2011 blowoff top highs. And to be honest, on


my channel, that has been the bull market indicator I've been paying most attention to and really trying to draw other people's attention to, especially my US viewers. What I'd like to ask in this question is what stops these highs that we're seeing in other currencies already for the price of silver? What stops it happening in US dollar terms? And is that even possible at this point? Well, it's always possible because no matter what you're trading, you look at as a pair really. I mean, what's the


dollar versus gold? What's the dollar versus oil? What's gold versus oil? And you can look at it and I like to look at it in value situations, meaning gold or silver versus another commodity. So you really have a basis of of real price discovery with leaving the price out. You know, how many barrels of oil does an ounce of gold buy now relative to the historic standard. So that's one thing, but where it will burn out then what causes it? Well, if we go back to 1980, what caused it was Paul Vulkar was


strong enough to step in and push the real interest rates up to where a real rate of return was available to investors. So, when the gold market peaked in 1980, January 21st, the actual published inflation rate was around 13%. It pushed interest rates up to about 20%, which means you had a real yield of 7% on your money. that killed the gold market and it killed it for like 20 years basically. Could that happen again? I doubt it would happen in that manner. We could see the market itself ratchet interest rates higher and higher


and higher. But really, if you use shadowstats.com, which is a metric showing what we showed in 1980 as far as true inflation rate, we're somewhere around 9%. So to get you know 10 or 12% where you'd have two or 3% real return on the actual inflation rate will we get that high doubted break the system. So what will happen really again it comes back to the first question is monetary demand. How many people realize that silver is a monetary asset as well as gold? Very few. But it doesn't take a


lot more people to discover that fact to come into the market and push the paper price of silver far higher. But it will exhaust. All markets continue till they actually stop. And any um parabolic move usually ends quicker than you'd like. That's why I got a little uh let's say negative on the gold market shorter term because of the rapidness of its escalation from the 2000 breakout level. Again, three-day rule. You know, $2,000 got to stay there above it. And it worked. And here we are in silver doing


it doing it at right now. But uh I think gold's going to stay in this trading range for at least this summer, maybe longer than that. Yeah, we agree on that. Just to just to take something that you that you just said, do you think that awareness of silver as a monetary metal is growing at all if you compare it back to where it was maybe in the early 90s? Oh, absolutely. I mean, you know, and the there was a deficit in silver from the year 1990 to 2005 for 15 years consecutively. We ate up the above


ground stockpile by uh by three quarters. We went from two billion ounces above ground to 500 billion. We ate up 1.5 billion ounces and the price hardly moved. But now you're seeing, you know, all kinds of commentators that will say there's a deficit, there's a deficit, there's a deficit. And you know there's uh other people in the industry that are well known and uh do great publications and they'll tell you there is no deficit. It depends how you define it. I think the fairest way to define it


is is the above ground stockpile growing or is it declining? It's declining so therefore we have a deficit. But some of these commentators say well it's just being stockpiled above ground. Yeah it is. So is gold. uh but nevertheless we do have a structural deficit and it will continue just on in on excuse me on uh industrial demand alone uh going forward at least that's the projection I mean you whenever you do these projections you're looking in the future how good is your crystal ball and


you know there's things that could change technology could change uh solar demand could change uh but on on aggregate on a calm, cool, and collected. We're looking at a structural deficit in silver for many, many years into the future. Calm, cool, and collected. I like that because that's kind of what my channel tries to be. So, a lot of people, a lot of my viewers, it's very uh viewer-driven channel. I'm regularly as answering questions that my viewers submit to me. And a lot of my


viewers ask me about the gold to silver ratio, which for those of you who are watching this video and are not familiar with what that is, that measures the relationship between the price of gold and the price of silver. So basically with uh with 1 ounce of gold, how many ounces of silver could you buy? Right? So we are seeing it come down right now with this silver breakout above $35. Uh what I'd like to know is what do you think about the gold to silver ratio as an indicator in the 21st century? Uh


what do you think it's best used for? And what do you think is a realistic gold to silver ratio that people should start uh or where people should start to think about potentially trading their silver for gold, especially if they're holding it in an IRA and and planning to do something like that? All right. Well, the first one you already answered. The first one is that it's a way to measure the real value of silver. So the gold silver ratio tells you if silver is undervalued or overvalued relative to gold. So 100


ounces of silver to buy 1 ounce of gold. You're much better off swapping your gold for silver at that level. And it's if you're a gold only freak, then just hold that silver as the hot potato. And when the ratio gets to say 50 to1 swap back, you've just doubled your gold position. So that's number one. Second one is what's it best used for? And that's what it's best used for is to trade between the metals. So there's a fund, I forget the name of it, starts with an A, but they're in Europe. And


all they are is a hard money fund. No stocks, only hard metal. But what they do for their fund is they swap between gold, silver, platinum, palladium. And so when the gold silver ratio gets a certain level, they start to swap uh gold for silver or silver for platinum or whatever. So that's the best use of it. And what do you think about a realistic ratio? So I've written about this. So there's really two ratios. One is something I wrote in my premium service a couple months ago about are


where are we going? Are we going to the quote unquote hyperinflationary depression or hyperinflationary blowoff? I put hyperinflationary quotes. Or are we looking for uh debt spiral? And and what do we do in either case? And there are different scenarios. So in a inflationary blowoff, I'll call it, we could look at something I wrote about way back in like 2003, uh, engineering the price of gold. And I said based on the current paper supply, the price of gold should be X. It's just a division problem. You look at the true


money supply and the ounces of gold the Treasury reportedly has. You do that division problem. If you do that now, you're looking you're pushing over $15,000 per ounce in gold. Well, how do you determine the silver price because it's not a monetary metal officially and that is basis the historic ratio which was the monetary ratio or historic ratio is about 16 to1. So if you look at that so far in this bull market the best silver has done versus gold is 33 to1. So twice that level so not nearly um the


dramatic increase it had in 1980. But I did say in in a big blowoff it could go past 60 to1. could go to 10 to one. But that's an inflationary situation which we may not have. We may be in a debt spiral even very few people even can think that way right now. But it could be occurring and before our eyes and it just won't be recognized by anyone for a while until they see it, you know, in the grocery store and auto lots and the price of homes and all this other stuff. In that case, silver would not have the


monetary appeal that it would in an inflationary environment. In that case, you might get back to the 33 to1. You might only get back to 70 to1. I don't know yet. Uh the market knows more than anyone. But if that were the case, I'd definitely alert my, you know, premium members and probably get around to it on a public, you know, forum like this at some point. But, um, I'm watching very closely. I don't expect anything. I try to let the that law, you know, of being open-minded enough to let the market


dictate. If silver really takes off here and goes parabolic, I know how the funds work or how the banks work and they'll basically back out and they won't make any trades. They'll let the retail and uh institutional market drive the price until it exhausts, which is a previous question. And when the buying pressure exhausts, you'll be able to tell just like throwing a baseball into the air. Throw with velocity and as it goes up, it loses velocity. It finally gets to the apex where it's absolute zero. And


then gravity takes over and starts coming down. So you can see it start to lose momentum, momentum, momentum, and stop. And then they go the other way. Well, the funds or the banks are really good at that. And what they'll do once the it exhausts or as it's exhausting, they'll start to short it again. And that's pretty much the end on a parabolic move. So we want to lock in profits. I, you know, it's very difficult job on my part. I'm probably overexlaining it. I think you follow it.


Hopefully your viewers do, but it's something that uh is something that some, let's say, some commentators really even aren't aware of how markets really move, what drives them, and when to get out. I've been a bit of a critic of the historical gold to silver ratios because I think since 2010 with all the central bank gold buying, you're having a natural distortion of the gold to silver ratio where you're seeing that kind of preference towards gold make itself visible in the market. Now, I've


said, you know, in an optimistic situation, 45 would be somewhere where I think we could realistically get. Now, I don't like to have my channel be in an echo chamber at all. So, I guess what I'll ask is building on that is what criticism would you give to to that point of view? No, I wouldn't. I mean, you know, I probably shifted my, you know, take. I mean, I tried to explain it a moment ago, but first of all, 50 is the basic average for the recent history. I mean, you buy any of these


trading softwares and they'll weight, you know, what your stock or commodity did, you know, two days ago, they'll wait it higher than what it did two weeks ago. And that'll be a higher waiting than what it did two months ago. So, you know, looking back in history and saying, well, when silver was money, it never traded above 20 to1, which is true for 5,100 years, but that's the past. So, we have to look at the present as more important of what silver's ratio do. So, I say 50 is reasonable. I


wouldn't push back on that. Again, you know, I'm fairly good at letting the market dictate, you know, what would happen. Now, having said that, there's one thing he brought to mind, and that is why is it that way? And he didn't ask the question, but there's a paper I talk about every now and again. It's on gold eagle. It's called gold standard equals fiat in disguise. And what that paper talks about is when you go to a gold only standard there's only thing one thing to measure it against and that's


fiat and fiat could go to infinity. I mean in theory all fiat currencies have been destroyed in the past. Will the dollar be destroyed? No. I don't think so. But it will probably be reintroduced or a new currency system will reintroduce or really a new system I believe. And I know we're going to talk about that in the in the list of questions. So I'll leave it at that. But the idea is that when the bankers went to gold only, they really had the power because now the people's money


silver was really taken that was demonetized and it was demonetized officially although it's still circulated and it wasn't and I'm the last generation where you know we saw silver in the coinage and so now it's been demonetized to the point of your point and that is that basically no one really thinks of it as money in the west. So the romance language is the word silver and money synonymous. So, they still at least subconsciously think about it as money, but they may not think of it as an investment. So, I'm


not pushing back that hard. I mean, the market's going to do what it's going to do. And again, if we're looking at a debt spiral, um I got to be very careful about how we exit this market. And um actually, it's quite concerning to me, but you know, it's what I get paid for. So, I'll leave it at that. You know, I like to think that my viewers are really amongst the most well-informed and intelligent in the in the metals community. And uh I think they come to the channel to really hear sober points


of view. And you know, if you really like what David is saying, please remember that uh that the Morgan Report is a place where you can get more about what David is saying. I am going to leave that link in the description below. This is not the end of our discussion, but I just want to make sure that you all remember that because I don't have guests on my channel very often. In fact, I think you're the fourth guest, David, that I've ever had on my channel. But that's only because


I'm not trying to deliver any kind of quantity of guests here, only quality. And I think that part of the message is really key for everybody who's watching this video right now. So, shifting gears a bit to the dollar and US debt. The debt market is under a lot of pressure right now. People are really starting with a microscope to watch these bond auctions, these US bond auctions. And I've said that gold and silver are really going to start making moves once the Federal Reserve returns to


quantitative easing. It's kind of been a thesis of mine at least for the past uh 18 months or so. And I and I really think that is inevitable. Uh, David, considering how the Fed is already rolling over more of the debt it owns on their balance sheet versus what they were doing 6 or 12 months ago, I'd like to ask you if you think quantitative easing will come back. Is it inevitable? If so, when and what would you expect uh when would you expect it to start? And what would you expect the market


reaction to be? Well, first, it's not inevitable. Although it certainly leans that way because of political pressure. I mean, Trump's already called out PAL several times and we need lower interest rates. He wants a cheaper dollar and that is the race to the bottom. And the race to the bottom means all fiat currencies eventually, as Voltater said, reach their intrinsic value of zero. Again, the US dollar will never go to zero. But if it continues to weaken, let's say that the Fed for whatever


reason decides that they will start to lower interest rates, then the QE will be picked up by the bond market and you'll probably see interest rates even though they're trying to push them lower. The Fed controls the discount window. They don't control the bond market although they have a great influence over it by their buying and selling pressure operation twist and all these things they've done. They don't have absolute control and the market could take over and actually even though


they're trying to lower interest rates, it might be able to lower them, but the market itself says, "No, no, no. I don't trust the dollar six months from now, five note, you know, two years from now. I don't trust the 10-year, and I certainly don't trust the 30-year." And bid the uh the bond market in a position where interest rates continue higher, even though they're trying to lower. I know that sounds obscure, but it's happened in the past. It could happen again. So what would replace it and that


will be the new monetary system. Will it be a central bank digital currency? Maybe, maybe not. We could have central banks, JP Morgan as an example, come up with a tokenized uh system with that's on the blockchain that is uh you know, US dollarbased or JP bank based or whatever. And then the stuff I wrote about um months ago, I can't remember every letter by exact date, but I talked about the potential for a new monetary system and how could they keep this game going because we're absolutely broke. It cannot pay the


debt. Mathematically, it's impossible. But what could they do? And the whole reason you can actually get a good loan when you buy a house is you got collateral. You know, you put a down payment or a car, you've got collateral. or the bank or the car dealer owns the house and you're just paying that collateral. You get a loan for it. Well, there is no real loan on the US debt other than the taxpayers's, you know, ability to be taxed and you could tax everything at 100%. We're still in the


mess. So, that won't work. But if you collateralize it something, you could continue the debt game. And if you collateralized all of the national parks, for example, and you you tokenized all the rivers, the streams, the rocks, the grass, the trees, who knows? The air, the birds, and the animals. I mean, I'm not joking. This has been proposed. They haven't said I agree with you. I think it's realistic. Yeah. Uh then all of a sudden you've got trillions of collateral and you got a


measly $ 37 trillion debt, but you got I don't know, make up a number for 250 trillion in collateral. Keep the game rolling, baby. So that worries me a great deal. And uh I actually think there's a pretty big push to do something like that. So uh where are we going? We're going to uncharted waters, as the sailors would say. Do you think that market players, some of the big players, even the central banks have already been positioning themselves in advance for this? And this is potentially why we've seen gold run


up starting from, let's say, late 2023 and early 2024 to where it is now. It is I mean markets anticipate the future. So the gold market has anticipated that it's worthy, it's needed, it might be used, that it's stalled out here. So maybe it's at a level that's the total anticipation by the central banks that uh I'm not saying it is. I'm just, you know, I'm answering the question the way I think. And the way I think is let's see what it does for the next, you know,


weeks, months, whatever. And if we don't get a big breakout above 3500 for several months, it's basically indicating that it's stalled out because they, the elite bankers, are working toward the next system and they think that they have enough gold and that it may not be needed. But it is there as a last resort. I do think that if the new system comes out and it's rejected or it doesn't really work that well that they might have to sweeten the bid and say okay well actually we are going to put


gold in the mix gold is going to be you know 10% of the new you know of the new American I remember that. Yeah. Okay. So David I really appreciate your time coming on Bald Guy Money today. Last question that I'd like to ask you is for somebody who is just learning about sound money. We discussed that you know more and more people are kind of becoming aware of this concept and I think it is thanks to social media, thanks to people like you who are sharing their time for people to hear um messages like this and videos like mine.


Um, so for people who are just learning about gold and silver, considering we've just had a large run up in prices, what would you tell a newbie who is about to start entering, start purchasing precious metals today? Would you tell them to wait for a pullback or would you just tell them to start buying now? What What do you think would be the best approach for somebody who's new to metals? Well, the best approach one is you got to be educated. You got to understand why you're owning. And once


you've achieved that, which isn't really that difficult. Yeah. Start now in dollar cost average. That's the best thing you could do. You don't have to make precious metals your number one center of the universe, but if you don't have it in a time of currency destruction, you'll wish you had. So, you know, 10%'s usually the, you know, normal recommendation. I've gone as high as 20% in the last several years because I really do think we are getting near the endgame and that


you'll want, you know, ready cash and there's no better cash than gold and silver. So, uh, don't go all in, but I especially think for younger people that you should try to do your savings in real money and use Gresham's law and pay your bills in fiat. So, if you're going to save in a savings account, put it into stacking silver or gold or both and uh, let that, you know, build up over time. Again, it doesn't have to be 100%. You've got to have fiat to pay your regular bills. But nonetheless, I think


to have a a side game. And lastly, if you look at the true money supply versus ounces of gold or ounces of silver, really you're buying it on that ratio almost as cheap as it's ever been. As hard to believe as that is, it's everyone focuses on the price and they're kind of thinking, well, $36 silver today is, you know, like $36 silver 10 years ago. but it is not. And so on an inflationadjusted basis, how much have you really gained in purchasing power? And that's what you got to be cognizant of. And I've always


said that if you stack metal and you had 10 ounces a year ago and you have 20 ounces today, but the price is down, you're still wealthier. Well, that doesn't make any sense. You aren't if the price is down. If you have to convert it to FE up, but honestly, 20 ounces is greater than 10 ounces. Therefore, you have more of it and you have more of a real asset. So, I hope that makes sense because the the people that are going to get hurt the most are the people at the margins, which is all


the poor. Uh they're getting wiped out. And then the middle class in America is definitely deteriorating. there's just not as much uh chances to make it quote unquote make it or whatever that means individually as there was in the past because the monetary system is getting toward the final endings and that means that the deterioration and the belief and trust in the system is deteriorating. Look at the bond market as you said that's a precursor to unraveling that uh cannot or may not


maybe cannot be put back together. Obviously the banking elite the banks seldom lose they're going to come up with something universal basic income some kind of uh you know AI situation where people that are displaced will be given assistance uh subsidies uh who knows but uh we are entering a brave new world and it encompasses more than the monetary system but the monetary system is the control mechanism and that control mechanism is getting tweaked to a point of in my opinion almost absolute


slavery which is exactly the antitheus of what I stand for which is individual freedom the right to be yourself and to be basically sovereign in your own your own belief system I mean there's nothing more important in the declaration of independence and the constitution than the inalable rights those came from a power greater than yourself that are inherent in just being human and that is being wiped And I agree with that. That's an important pillar of this channel as well. So David, other than the Morgan


Report, where else can my viewers find you, follow your work, hear what you have to say? Go to the morganreport.com, sign up for our free newsletter, and there's a set of icons in the upper right hand side. You just click them, it'll go to a Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube. All those are just available one click. So just to go to the landing page, you've got instant access to all the other platforms. Thank you so much for appearing on BaldGuy Money, David. My pleasure. Thank you. So, I want to


thank you all for watching that conversation with David Morgan. Please remember to check him out at the morganreport.com. And if you have any questions about what we discussed, please leave them in the comments section below. I may pick that question to appear in my Sunday video as I always have one viewer question in that video. And until the next time we see each other, everyone, I'm wishing you all a fantastic day ahead. Please remember to take care of yourselves and take care of each other. Goodbye.