Ladies and gentlemen, stop what you're doing right now because what I'm about to tell you could change everything you think you know about your money, your wealth, and your financial future. Big news has just come out of the LBMA in London and comics in New York. And if you own gold or silver, you cannot afford to ignore it. Not for a second. The markets are whispering something loud and clear. Trouble is coming for anyone relying on paper promises, fake gold, and digital numbers on a screen.
Stop for a moment and think about what's really going on in the world of gold and silver trading right now. Most people have no idea. They hear headlines about prices going up or down. Maybe a fleeting report about futures contracts and they think they understand the market, but but the truth is far more complex and far more alarming. The London Bullion Market Association, LBMA, and the ComX in New York aren't just exchanges. They're the engines that drive the perception of gold and silver
prices around the globe. And what's happening there today should concern anyone who owns or even thinks about owning these precious metals. First, let's talk about the London market. The LBMA is the heartbeat of the global gold and silver trade. This is where the biggest banks, the central banks and major bullion dealers come together to set prices, to trade, and to establish the narrative of value. But here's the problem. The price that comes out of London doesn't always reflect the
physical reality. It's a market dominated by paper contracts, by promises of gold that may or may not exist in a vault somewhere. When you see a gold price reported, it's often based on electronic trades, on swaps, on forwards, on leverage positions that have nothing to do with physical metal moving from one hand to another. And this gap between paper and reality is growing wider every day. Then there's the comics, the New York futures market. This is where many Americans and institutional investors participate in
the gold and silver markets. The ComX is supposed to provide a platform for price discovery, for hedging risk, and for facilitating delivery of physical metal. But let's be honest, most contracts never result in physical delivery. They're closed out, rolled over, or traded several times before any metal changes hands. What this means is that a massive part of the gold and silver market is purely speculative. People think they're buying gold, but in reality, they're buying a piece of paper
that says they own it. And when the time comes to actually take delivery, the system can and often does run into serious problems. Now, you might think, so what? It's all regulated. It's transparent. That's exactly what the authorities want you to think. But the truth is that the market structure itself is fragile. LBMA and ComX are intertwined with the banking system. And the same banks that are leveraged up in the paper gold market are also the banks that have trillions of dollars in
exposure elsewhere, in derivatives, in government debt, in loans that are underwater. And when those banks face pressure, guess where the stress shows up first? Not in the stock market, not in the bond market, but in the markets that are supposed to be be the safest having gold and silver. You have to understand that gold and silver aren't just commodities. their insurance. And insurance only works if the underlying asset is real. But when LBMA and comics are filled with paper claims, promises,
and electronic entries, that insurance is only as strong as the system backing it. And the system is weak. Extremely weak. Central banks continue to manipulate interest rates to expand their balance sheets to debase currencies. They can do this as long as people believe in the system. But when confidence falters, the first cracks will appear in the very markets that were supposed to protect investors. Let's not forget the issue of leverage. Both LBMA and Comix allow enormous leverage. A small deposit can control a
huge amount of gold or silver. That might sound like an opportunity, but it's a double-edged sword. When prices move against the paper holders, margin calls come in, positions are liquidated, and the cascade can be catastrophic. It doesn't take a crash to cause panic. Even a modest correction can ignite a chain reaction in a market built on promises rather than metal. And when that happens, people holding real gold and silver, physical bullion in their possession, are suddenly the ones holding the only truly safe asset.
Another thing most people don't realize is how thin the physical market actually is compared to the paper market. On LBMA, tons of gold and silver are traded every day, but the amount of metal actually delivered is a fraction of that. Comx is even more extreme. The total paper contracts often represent multiples of the physical metal actually available. In other words, there are hundreds, sometimes thousands of contracts for every ounce of physical gold or silver. That's a recipe for disaster if everyone suddenly wants to
take delivery. And I can tell you the signals we're seeing right now suggest that moment could be approaching faster than most investors realize. The reason this is critical for anyone holding gold and silver is simple. If you're invested in ETFs, in paper contracts, in certificates, or in any vehicle that doesn't give you direct access to the metal, you are taking on counterparty risk. And in a market like LBMA or COMX where the disconnect between paper and physical is so stark that counterparty
risk is not hypothetical, it's very real. When push comes to shove, when stress hits the system, those paper promises can evaporate, leaving investors with nothing but a number on a screen. It's also worth mentioning that the the moves being made by central banks and large bullion banks in these markets are often hidden from the public eye. They can manipulate prices through largecale buying and selling through leasing programs and through other mechanisms that are opaque to ordinary investors. This isn't conspiracy. It's
how the market operates and the consequences for anyone holding metals that aren't fully secured and physical can be severe. This is why you hear people like me constantly emphasizing the need to hold physical bullion because at the end of the day LBMA and com will reflect what the system wants you to see not the reality of what actually exists. The paper price can be suppressed, manipulated or distorted. The physical market however has a memory and it cannot be faked. When the disconnect between paper and physical
becomes too great, prices can spike violently. And when that happens, the paper holders, the ETFs, the futures contracts are at the mercy of whoever actually controls the metal. So, as you consider what's happening in LBMA and comx, don't just look at the headlines. Don't be lulled into complacency by the apparent stability of paper prices. The truth is the system is precarious and the signs of stress are all around us. If you own gold and silver, you need to know exactly what you have, where it is,
and whether it's real and accessible. This is not about speculation. It's about survival in a financial system that's increasingly unstable, overleveraged, and manipulated. And make no mistake, these markets are critical because they set the tone for the entire global economy. Elba and Comx aren't just exchanges. They are the instruments through which central banks, bullion banks, and institutional investors transmit confidence or fear throughout the system. What happens in these
markets doesn't stay in London or New York. It ripples across the globe impacting currencies, inflation, and ultimately your purchasing power. So the takeaway is clear. You cannot ignore LBMA and comics. You cannot assume that the paper gold you see on a screen is equivalent to the real thing. And you cannot assume that the system is stable simply because prices aren't crashing today. The fragility is there. It's real. And it's only a matter of time before it becomes evident to everyone.
Those who understand this, who act on this knowledge, who secure real tangible assets are the ones who will be prepared. Everyone else will be at the mercy of the market. And history tells us that is rarely a position of strength. Look, I want to be very clear with you right now. The financial system as we know it is teetering on the edge of disaster and most people don't even see it. They look at stock market indexes. They check bond yields. Maybe glance at the Federal Reserve statements and they think everything is fine. They
think the economy is healthy, that the dollar is stable, that their savings are safe. But all of that is an illusion, a carefully constructed illusion designed to keep people complacent while the real risks accumulate behind the scenes. And if you don't understand these risks, if you don't prepare for them, you are about to get blindsided. The first and most obvious risk is currency debasement. The dollar, the euro, the yen, none, none of these currencies are backed by anything tangible. They are
fiat money, meaning their value exists only because the government says it does. and the people trust it. But trust can evaporate. Governments can print unlimited amounts of money. And in fact, they have been doing it for decades. Every time the Fed, the ECB, or the Bank of Japan expands their balance sheets, they are effectively taking a dollar, euro, or yen out of your pocket. You don't see it immediately because inflation is often hidden in statistics that are manipulated or lagging. But
make no mistake, the purchasing power of your of your currency is steadily declining. And when confidence in the currency falters, that's when real financial chaos begins. Then there's the debt. Our financial system is drowning in it. Governments, corporations, and households have accumulated staggering levels of debt, much of it denominated in fiat currencies that are losing value. Central banks have kept interest rates artificially low to make this debt manageable. But low rates have created a
dangerous illusion of stability. Borrowers can pretend they are solvent as long as rates remain low. But the moment rates rise or inflation accelerates, defaults will start to cascade. And when defaults cascade in a system so intertwined and leveraged, the effects ripple far beyond individual borrowers. Entire markets can seize up, credit can freeze, and institutions that are considered too big to fail can collapse. Speaking of leverage, this is where the real fragility lies. The entire financial system is built on
leverage on borrowed money. Banks leverage deposits. Hedge funds leverage capital. Central banks leverage their balance sheets. And even ordinary investors leverage through margin accounts. Leverage amplifies profits when things are going your way, but it amplifies losses far faster when the tide turns. And with the level of leverage in the system today, even a small disruption can trigger a domino effect that spreads through global markets. The higher the leverage, the smaller the shock needed to create panic
and the bigger the fallout when it hits. Another risk people overlook is the hidden interconnectedness of the system. Banks, investment firms, insurance companies, and even governments are all tied together in complex ways. You might think your money is safe in a reputable bank or your investments are insulated. But the truth is that a problem in one corner of the system can quickly infect the rest. When Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008, the financial world came to a standstill. That wasn't an isolated
incident. It was a symptom of systemic risk. And today, the exposure is orders of magnitude greater. Derivatives, swaps, and other complex financial instruments have multiplied the risks, making the system even more fragile. Inflation is another ticking time bomb. Most people think inflation is just a temporary phenomenon, something that comes and goes. But the reality is that inflation has been a constant silent tax on savers and retirees. It's hidden in higher prices, in lower purchasing power, and in manipulated economic data.
Governments and central banks pretend they can manage inflation, but [snorts] history shows that once inflation gets out of control, it's almost impossible to stop without triggering severe economic pain. And when inflation rises sharply, it undermines confidence in the currency shakes markets and accelerates the pressure on all financial assets. Investors also underestimate the fragility of the banking system. Banks today are supposed to be the pillars of stability, but many of them are built on
a foundation of paper assets, derivatives, and borrowed money. They are highly leveraged, exposed to risky loans, and dependent on continuous liquidity from central banks. The system works as long as confidence remains. But once depositors start questioning the solveny of these institutions, even a minor panic can become a full-blown crisis. And in a world where central banks are already stretched thin, they may not have the tools or the credibility to stabilize the system once fear takes hold, then there's the issue
of bubbles. They exist in every corner of the market. Stocks, bonds, real estate, cryptocurrencies, you name it. Bubbles are fueled by cheap money, by speculation, and by the belief that the government or central bank will always step in to prevent losses. But bubbles eventually burst and when they do they take down not only investors but the broader economy as well. And because so much of today's wealth is tied up in paper assets that have been inflated by monetary policy, the consequences of a
bubble bursting will be far more severe than in the past. People also fail to recognize the risk posed by policy mistakes. Governments are constantly intervening in the economy, attempting to fix problems with more debt, more spending, and more monetary expansion. But these interventions often create unintended consequences, distort markets, and exacerbate the very risks they are meant to mitigate. Every time a central bank prints more money, it temporarily stabilizes the system. But it also sews the seeds for the next
crisis. And the bigger the intervention, the bigger the eventual collapse. What all of this means is that holding wealth in paper assets, in bank accounts, or in government bonds is riskier than most people realize. These are promises, not real wealth. The moment confidence in the system falters, the value of those promises can plummet. And who benefits? The people who hold tangible real assets, gold, silver, and other physical commodities that have intrinsic value. These are the assets that survive the
collapse of fiat systems, the bursting of bubbles, and the failure of leverage, dependent institutions. The danger is compounded by the fact that most people are blind to it. Financial news focuses on shortterm movements, on Fed speeches, on stock market trends, and not on the underlying fragility of the system. People are lulled into complacency, believing that everything is fine because prices aren't crashing today. But the reality is that risk is accumulating quietly, invisibly, and exponentially. When the tipping point
comes, it will hit fast and hard. Those who ignored the warnings, who relied on the system to protect them, will find themselves unprepared. So the takeaway is simple. The financial system is extremely vulnerable. Fiat currencies are under siege from inflation. Debt levels unsustainable. Leverage is at dangerous highs. and central banks are powerless to prevent the inevitable consequences. If you want to protect your wealth, you cannot rely on paper promises or the illusion of stability. You must recognize the risks, understand
the fragility of the system, and take action to secure real tangible assets that can survive the collapse. This is not speculation. This is not fear-mongering. This is reality. Every major crisis in history has followed a similar pattern. excessive debt, artificial monetary policy, overconfidence in paper assets, and eventual loss of confidence in the system. We are following that same trajectory today. And anyone who refuses to acknowledge it is placing their wealth and their future at grave risk.
The clock is ticking and the risks are rising every day. Those who understand this, who prepare for it, who take steps to protect their wealth, will be the ones who survive. Those who ignore it, who trust the system blindly, will be the ones who pay the price. There is no middle ground, and the time to act is now because waiting for the crisis to arrive is the shest way to be caught unprepared. When it comes to gold and silver, most people think that buying a paper claim is the same as owning the
real thing. They believe that an ETF, a futures contract, or some electronic ledger entry represents actual bullion sitting in a vault somewhere. But that's a dangerous misconception and it's one that can destroy your wealth faster than you realize. The reality is that there is a huge growing discrepancy between physical and paper gold and silver and understanding that gap is absolutely critical if you want to protect your financial future. Paper gold and silver dominate the market. Most people never
take delivery. They just trade contracts. On COMX, for instance, the vast majority of contracts are closed or rolled over before any metal actually changes hands. LBMA in London operates similarly with prices often set by electronic transactions rather than physical deliveries. And while these paper markets provide liquidity and a sense of accessibility, they do not guarantee that the metal is there if and when you want it. The paper market has grown to many multiples of the actual physical supply. That means there are
hundreds, sometimes thousands of claims for every ounce of gold or silver that physically exists. This is not a small discrepancy. It's a structural flaw, a ticking time bomb for anyone who assumes that paper is equivalent to reality. Now, you might say, well, the system works and the contracts are backed by bullion. But that's not always true. Even when contracts are technically backed, the logistics of delivery become a serious problem when demand surges. Take silver for example. There's a
limited supply in London, New York, and other vaults. If everyone suddenly demanded physical delivery, there simply wouldn't be enough metal to satisfy the contracts. Prices would spike violently, and anyone relying on paper holdings could find themselves holding nothing but a meaningless contract while the actual bullion is gone. The system works in calm markets. But the moment there's stress, the illusion disappears. This is why central banks and bullion banks often lease or lend gold. On the
surface, it appears that there's plenty of metal in the system, but a large portion of it is already promised, loaned out, or leveraged in some way. The physical supply that's actually available to end users is much smaller than the total paper claims suggest. This leverage creates enormous risk. If multiple parties attempt to take delivery at the same time, the paper system cannot cope. And when that happens, the market can experience unprecedented volatility as prices adjust rapidly to reflect the scarcity
of real metal. The problem is exacerbated by the fact that many investors are unaware of the differences. Most people buy gold ETFs or silver ETFs thinking they're as safe as holding bars or coins. They're not. ETFs are a form of paper ownership. The ETF may hold some bullion, but it is a claim on a pool of gold that is pulled with thousands of other investors assets. You do not control which bars are allocated to you. Nor can you guarantee immediate delivery. And in times of crisis, ETFs can trade at
significant discounts or premiums to the underlying metal, reflecting market stress rather than actual value. There is also the issue of settlement. In paper markets, settlement is often deferred. You might think you own gold today, but the contract may only settle in the future. That's fine in a calm market. But if physical supply tightens, your position could become worthless, or the price you receive for actual delivery could be dramatically higher than what you expected. The gap between
paper promises and real metal is what creates opportunities for manipulation. Large banks and institutional players can influence prices in the paper market, suppressing them temporarily, while the actual physical market tells a very different story. Let's take a moment to talk about silver specifically. Silver is far more volatile than gold because the physical market is relatively small. The total above ground silver supply is limited and industrial demand consumes a significant portion of it every year.
When people buy paper silver, they often think they can exchange it for physical ounces at will. But when demand for physical silver spikes, delivery delays occur, premiums on coins, and bars sore, and paper holders are left exposed. We've already seen this happen multiple times in the last decade with silver ETFs unable to immediately meet redemption requests. That should serve as a warning paper. Silver is not a substitute for physical silver and the discrepancy can be extreme when stress
hits. The same logic applies to gold. Although the market is larger, gold ETFs and futures contracts dominant trading, but they too are subject to the same structural risks. A significant surge in physical demand can overwhelm the system. The paper market can be manipulated temporarily, but it cannot create more metal. When the illusion cracks, those who hold paper claims may find themselves unable to access the actual gold they thought they owned. And that is exactly what makes owning physical metals so important. It's
tangible. It's real. And it cannot disappear at the whim of a bank or exchange. Many investors fail to consider the geopolitical and systemic dimensions of this discrepancy. Central banks themselves are major players in both paper and physical markets. When they buy or sell gold, it affects both the perception of scarcity and the actual supply. Paper markets can react instantly, but physical markets cannot. That mismatch can create violent price swings, and anyone relying solely on paper is exposed. Meanwhile, large
institutions with real physical holdings are the ones who profit because they can actually take delivery or withhold supply strategically. The average investor is left on the sidelines watching prices soar while unable to access the metal. This is why I constantly emphasize the need for physical ownership. Bars, coins, and allocated bullion are not just symbolic. They are real insurance against the collapse or disruption of paper markets. When you hold physical metal, you control it. You can store it, access it,
or liquidate it as needed. It is not a claim on a promise. It is the actual asset itself. And in a financial system increasingly dominated by leverage speculation and paper derivatives, having real tangible gold and silver is the difference between security and exposure. Furthermore, the gap between paper and physical is only widening. ETFs and futures markets continue to grow as more investors seek convenient exposure to precious metals without actually taking possession. Meanwhile, mining production is constrained,
recycling is limited, and central banks are quietly accumulating. Physical demand is increasing from private investors, governments, and institutions alike, while paper supply grows faster than metal supply. This divergence is unsustainable. Eventually, it will reach a tipping point where the paper price no longer reflects the true scarcity of physical bullion. History offers a clear lesson. When paper claims vastly exceed physical supply, the system becomes unstable. In 2008, for example, we saw
disruptions in the delivery of metals and extraordinary volatility in futures markets. Premiums on physical bullion spiked as the paper market failed to reflect reality and those who held real allocated metal were protected while those who relied on paper were exposed to counterparty risk and delayed access. That pattern is likely to repeat and probably on a much larger scale because leverage derivatives and institutional control of paper markets have grown exponentially since then in short the
discrepancy between physical and paper gold and silver is not a minor technicality. It is a fundamental risk. Anyone who thinks they can rely on paper holdings as a substitute for real metal is ignoring the structural weaknesses of the system. The more paper claims there are compared to physical metal, the greater the potential for disruption, volatility, and loss. And in a world of rising geopolitical tensions, currency debasement, and financial instability, those risks are only increasing. This is
why your strategy must prioritize tangible assets. Don't just focus on ETFs, contracts, or digital claims. Make sure you have access to real physical bullion that you can hold and control. Understand the difference between ownership on paper and ownership in reality because that difference can determine your financial survival when the system experiences stress. If you fail to recognize the gap between physical and paper metals, you may be blindsided by events that seem sudden but are in fact inevitable. The takeaway
is unmistakable. Physical gold and silver are insurance. Paper, gold, and silver are exposure. In comm markets, the difference seems minor. In times of crisis, it can be catastrophic. And right now, as demand for physical metals rises and paper markets remain inflated, but the risk to paper holders is growing every day. Understanding this discrepancy, preparing for it, and securing real tangible assets is not just prudent. It's essential. If you own gold or silver, or if you're thinking
about owning any form of wealth, you need to understand this. The window to protect yourself is closing and the risks are accelerating faster than most people realize. Too many investors are sitting on their hands believing that the system will protect them, that central banks will somehow prevent losses or that the markets will remain calm indefinitely. That is a dangerous fantasy. The truth is that we are living in a world of rising financial instability, growing leverage, and increasingly fragile markets. And the
time to act is not next year, not next month, but right now, let me be blunt. Complacency is the single greatest risk an investor can take today. Most people look at stock indices hitting record highs and think everything is fine. They look at government bond yields and see stability. They glance at inflation reports and believe that price increases are under control. But the comm you see is deceptive. It is a veneer, a temporary illusion. Beneath it lies a system built on debt, leverage, and paper promises that cannot withstand a
significant shock. And when the shock comes, and it will it will hit fast and hard, catching unprepared investors by surprise. Now, consider the role of central banks. For decades, they've told investors and the public that they can manage risk, control inflation, and stabilize markets. But the reality is that central banks have created the very fragility they claim to prevent. Low interest rates, quantitative easing, and excessive money printing have encouraged excessive borrowing, speculation, and
the accumulation of risk. These policies have made the system more dependent than ever on continuous intervention. Any hint that central banks might pull back, tighten policy, or lose credibility could trigger panic. And when that panic spreads, those who have failed to protect themselves with tangible assets will be the ones most exposed. One of the most overlooked aspects of today's financial system is leverage. The system is a wash in it. Banks, investment firms, hedge funds, corporations, and
even individual investors are all operating with borrow borrowed money. Leverage magnifies gains in good times. But it also magnifies losses. And with leverage this high, it doesn't take a major crisis to trigger cascading failures. A modest decline in asset values can become catastrophic when multiplied by excessive borrowing. And when losses hit, the market responds violently, often wiping out paper wealth overnight. If you're not holding real tangible assets, you are on the wrong side of that storm. Consider inflation
and currency risk. Most investors underestimate how much the purchasing power of their money is being eroded. Central banks may claim that inflation is under control, but the truth is that it is a silent tax on anyone holding cash or paper assets. every day the real value of dollars, euros or yen is shrinking even if it isn't immediately obvious. This is why gold and silver remain the ultimate hedge. They are real assets, tangible stores of value and they cannot be created out of thin air. Investors who delay taking action risk
losing not just opportunity but also wealth in real terms. The urgency also stems from the growing gap between paper assets and reality. In markets like LBA and ComX, paper contracts far outnumber physical metal. In ETFs and futures, promises of gold or silver dominate the system while the actual metal is far more limited. That means when demand for real delivery spikes, there is a structural risk of extreme volatility. Investors who rely on paper holdings may find themselves unable to access physical metal when they need it most.
The writing is on the wall. Those who are proactive and secure tangible bullion now will be in a position of strength, while those who wait may be left scrambling when the system falters. There's also a human element to this urgency. Markets are emotional and fear spreads faster than reason when a crisis hits investors who haven't prepared panic, triggering selloffs, shortages, and dramatic price swings. History is full of examples. In 2008, banks teetered on the edge of collapse, and investors who held tangible assets
weathered the storm, while those heavily invested in paper suffered enormous losses. Complacency in a fragile system is not just risky, it's dangerous. And with the level of systemic risk today, a small trigger could spark a cascade that impacts markets worldwide. Another pointy, geopolitical tensions, trade disruptions, and government intervention are all amplifying risks. In a world where national debt is skyrocketing, deficits are growing, and economic policy is unpredictable, relying solely
on paper wealth is a gamble. Any shock to confidence, whether it's a currency devaluation, a bank failure, or political instability can magnify financial risk. Investors who fail to prepare for these eventualities are placing their wealth in jeopardy and there is very little time to reposition before reality asserts itself. The urgency is compounded by the opportunity cost of an action. Every day you wait, inflation erodess your savings. Every day you rely on paper assets instead of securing tangible metal. You increase
your exposure to systemic risk. The longer you hesitate, the more difficult it becomes to acquire physical gold and silver at reasonable prices. Premiums rise, supplies tighten, and investors who procrastinate find themselves forced into reactive decisions instead of strategic positioning. Acting early is not just smart, it is essential. And let's not forget about the psychological aspect. Investors who fail to recognize the urgency often tell themselves, "It won't happen to me or I'll wait and
see." That mindset is precisely what leads to catastrophic losses. Financial crisis are rarely gradual. They arrive quickly, often when confidence appears unshakable. By the time the broader public reacts, opportunities to protect and preserve wealth have already passed. Prepared investors who understand the risks and act decisively will survive and prosper. Those who wait will be left exposed. The lesson here is simple. You cannot rely on the illusion of stability. The markets, the central
banks, and the financial media may suggest calm, but underneath lies a growing accumulation of risk. Every indicator from rising debt levels to leverage ratios, from inflation to the growing discrepancy between paper and physical assets points to increasing vulnerability. The question is not if, but when the system will be tested and whether you will be ready when it is. This is why action cannot be delayed. Owning physical gold and silver, diversifying away from paper claims, understanding counterparty risks, and
preparing for volatility are no longer optional. They are necessary. The cost of an action far outweighs any temporary convenience of paper markets or digital exposure. Inaction leaves investors at the mercy of a system increasingly prone to failure, while those who act are in a position to preserve and protect wealth in real terms. Time is the critical factor. The longer you wait, the more risk accumulates, the more the gap between paper promises and reality widens, and the more difficult it becomes to secure real assets. History
shows that financial crisis arrives suddenly, and those who wait until the last minute are often the ones who suffer the most. You must act before the window closes, before premiums on physical metals spike, before access to tangible bullion becomes constrained. The clock is ticking and every day brings more risk. In the end, the urgency is crystal clear. The financial system is fragile. Inflation is real. Debt is excessive. And leverage is dangerously high. Paper wealth is exposed. While tangible assets, gold,
silver, and other real stores of value are the only reliable protection. Investors who recognize this, who take decisive steps now, will survive the coming storm. Those who delay will be left holding promises that may soon be worthless. The difference between preparation and complacency is survival. And the time to act is not tomorrow, it is today. So watch closely, stay informed, and don't trust anyone who tells you your paper claims are as good as gold. Because in the coming storm, the difference between paper and reality
will determine who survives and who doesn't. Remember, the news from LBMA and Comax isn't just headlines, it's a warning. And if you own gold and silver, it's your wake up call.
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