Vance said it , the previous White House economic adviser Jared Bernstein, Mr. knucklehead, he said it in a report he wrote, dethrone King Dollar, lose the reserve status quietly, right? We're going to soft default on it. But if you are going to let this happen, Van Fund says gold could go to 180,000 an ounce. That's their number, not mine. So let's just play this out. A $20 million bond you sell 20 years down the road, zero coupon. So you can bring back manufacturing at zero upfront borrowing
costs. The rise of gold devalues a dollar. You can sell it to the world. Now if today you had to pay on that bond $5,000 an ounce gold, that's 4,000 ounces of gold you would owe today. Let me walk you through a theory that's getting a lot of attention in the financial world. The idea is simple, but the implications are huge. Some people believe the United States may eventually allow the dollar to lose its reserve currency status. Not suddenly, but slowly, quietly, almost like a soft default. It sounds extreme, but look at
the math. Imagine the government issues a 20-year bond worth $20 million. If gold is $5,000 an ounce, that debt equals about 4,000 ounces of gold. But what if gold doesn't stay at 5,000? Some analysts suggest it could rise dramatically over time, even six figures per ounce. If that happened, the same $20 million debt would represent only a tiny fraction of the gold it once did. In other words, if the dollar weakens while gold rises, the real burden of that debt shrinks dramatically. And that's where the theory gets
interesting. A weaker dollar could make American manufacturing more competitive again. US exports would become cheaper for the rest of the world. Production could slowly return and the economy could rebalance. As legendary market analyst Richard Russell once said, "You either inflate or you die." Right now, the United States consumes far more than it produces. So the question becomes, how do you bring production back? One possible answer is currency devaluation. And that leads to another idea, gold
revaluation. Technically, a government could raise the official value of gold. If the price rises enough, the value of a country's gold reserves rises with it, strengthening the balance sheet. Whether it happens intentionally or naturally through market forces, the result could be the same. Gold becomes far more valuable. At the same time, another shift is happening. Digital money. You've probably heard of Tether and other stable coins. These digital tokens are designed to stay pegged to the US
dollar and move quickly across blockchain networks. Think of the blockchain as the railway and the stable coin as the train carrying the money. Behind the scenes, companies hold large reserves of US Treasury bonds backing these coins, which helps maintain demand for the dollar. Some believe stable coins strengthen the dollar system. Others think they're simply a bridge toward future central bank digital currencies. But while the financial system evolves, one thing hasn't changed for thousands of years. Gold. Many
people think of gold as an investment. But others see it differently. Gold isn't meant to make you rich. Gold is wealth. It's a way to store purchasing power outside the banking system. Because throughout history, paper currencies have come and gone, but gold has remained. And in a world of rising debt, changing currencies, and rapidly evolving financial systems, that kind of stability might matter more than ever. Are you curious about investing in gold and silver, but feel held back by fear
or confusion? This ebook is designed especially for new investors who want clarity, not complexity. It breaks down gold and silver trading strategies in a simple, practical way. No jargon, no hype. Why wait? Hurry up. Please visit this link to get your copy today and use code Dundeeple for a huge discount. More than 1,000 people took the first step with this ebook. And today, they're living proof that smart investing changes lives. This ebook is available in Amazon Kindle. Also, >> what if Van is right and it did go to
180,000 or we see a revaluation? Well, at 180,000 it's 110 ounces of gold instead of 4,000 ounces of gold. So now at the end of the road, you have 110 ounces to pay. The dollar is devalued. You bring back manufacturing. You sell it to the world. That is my thesis. That I think is what they're trying to do. Now, will it happen? Who knows? The world is very fluid. But to to anyone who says gold will be revalued, there is a possibility that it could be synthetically revalued where the the president would just say to the Treasury
Secretary without congressional approval, you tell the head of the Federal Reserve to revalue gold. And they would and that would inject tremendous amount of money into the Treasury because every $4,000 increase in the price of gold gives the Treasury 1 trillion free and clear. They could do it synthetically by overtly saying it or they do it by just anytime money moves synthetically it suppresses the dollar and that interest is used to buy gold. Either way you will see gold way higher. It is the only way out because as my
mentor God rest his soul Richard Russell used to say you can either inflate or die or in this case how do you produce your he would say that because you couldn't produce your way out. We consume more than we produce. Well, how do we bring back that that production? That's how you do it. And maybe Judy is right. And the fact that even though she didn't get elected or nominated rather, the fact that she just sat down with Bent gives me gives me great hope that maybe indeed and the amount of talk
about July 4th all of a sudden makes me feel like maybe they are on this path. We'll see higher. Luke is right. Whether it's whether it is done just by revaluing it the way they've done it before or letting it go up as a offshoot of the Genius Act, which I think they will do, or both. He's right, it will be higher. [snorts] >> All right. Um, and just FYI, um, both Luke and Judy Shelton uh, are going to be participating on the faculty for the thoughtful money spring conference
that's coming up in uh, gosh, just a little less than a month from today. That's coming up fast. Also, Andy, you're going to be participating in that, too. So folks, um that's just three of a of of an amazing faculty that we put together for the event. Um real quick question for you on Tether, Andy. Um so they create the stable coin. I get it if I'm sending you money, right? And the stable coin is the car that runs on the Bitcoin rails to to instantly transfer that money over to you. But but Tether
is collecting the um the yield off that treasury, right? and they're making a gazillion dollars on it, right? Which, as you said, they're now putting into gold. Why would the US government let intermediaries like Tether >> do that? I mean, that that's such a great position to be in. It's just you're just a moneyming machine there, right? >> Um, so a do you have a thought on that general question, but b do you expect at some point the US government to step in and say, "We don't need an intermediary.
We'll just have a US stable coin." and you know the government holds on to that or whatever. >> What is a US stable coin called? >> Sorry, what's a US stable coin? >> What would a US government stable coin be called? >> It's called a central bank digital currency. >> Yeah. >> And what is the difference between a central bank digital currency and a stable coin? It's it's a ruse, if you will. Now, I interviewed Katherine Austin [clears throat] Fitz recently.
>> Um it's got over 400,000 views in a short period of time. She's a smart lady. But she basic my theory it would be and I'll tell you what what she said but my theory is that what there's such a push back against the CBDC. Subscribe and stay one step ahead.
Post a Comment