Peak Prosperity - How BRICS is Driving the Gold Price
Episode Date: November 2, 2024Gold’s rise to $2,800 is driven by Eastern central bank buying and BRICS’ de-dollarization efforts. This impacts global finance, treasuries, Bitcoin, and geopolitical tensions....
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Hello, everybody, and welcome to this edition of Finance U. I am your host, Chris Martinson
of Peak Financial Investing, and today we're going to be discussing gold hitting $2,800
an ounce, the BRICS conference, what's coming out of that, and what is going on with treasuries
and Bitcoin?
What are they telling us?
I think they're telling us something.
To help us interpret all that is David Russell, CEO of GoldCore.
David, good to see you again.
Good to see you, Chris.
How are you?
Good.
So you're joining us from Dublin.
Are you in Ireland at the moment?
I am indeed, yes.
Dublin, Ireland.
So, well, thank you for taking the time today.
Where do we start?
Well, the punchline is gold just poked its head above 2,800 this morning.
It's been relentlessly rising, but that's for reasons.
Maybe we could discuss some of those reasons,
and we'll discuss gold itself.
Sure.
What's top of mind for you for explaining this?
Ultimately, and last time I was on,
last couple of times I was on,
we talked about the fact that this isn't a retail-led rally at all.
We know that.
This is central bank buying, okay?
And in particular, this is central bank buying
that is not Western central banks
to the same degree that it is Eastern central banks.
I'm going to say Eastern.
I mean, everywhere east of Europe, basically.
We have just had the BRICS conference there
within the last week or so,
depending on when this goes out.
That is hugely significant to explain what is going on here
and the rally that we have seen this year.
I was looking at that and watching that closely,
and there are seven key things that came out of that, right?
But there's one or two of them that are major impacts for the gold price.
But the seven things that we have, if we look at what's happening, we've got the BRICS, Brazil, Russia, India, China.
Okay, now let's have a look at that.
And if you look at India, China, now they've been kind of, there's been an awful tension along the border there with them for the last four years they are coming to an
agreement on that as a result coming out of the out of the bricks conference and there's a
de-escalation of tension there you've got one of those that's got a population of about one they
both have a population close to 1.45 billion each billion yeah with a big b right that's 2.9 billion between the two of them
that's 35 percent of the world's population. This is a huge trading block.
And if we cut to the quick of exactly what the purpose of BRICS is, it is effectively to stop trading amongst themselves using the US dollar and at the same time reduce their trading with the US.
So this is revolutionary in terms of geofinance, global markets. It's huge.
Putin talked about the second thing that he talked about was effectively establishing a new world order.
Again, these are big statements to hear.
They want to expand that BRICS association.
They have 30 countries on the waiting list. 30 countries.
So now we're talking about something that's going from 40% of the world population off to something that is significantly higher than that. So we've got a growing appetite for this de-dollarization,
or at least a growing appetite to reduce the reliance on the dollar
the other thing that we might touch on this again later is he talked about the geopolitical putin
this is talked about the geopolitical tension that there is in the middle east at the moment and how
he believes that we are very close to a war breaking out particularly in this instance
between israel and iran now we know the close ties then that there are between iran and russia We are very close to a war breaking out, particularly in this instance between Israel and Iran.
Now, we know the close ties then that there are between Iran and Russia, Russia and China.
So we've got an axis growing on that side of things.
And a leading component of that axis, Russia, believing that there is going to be a war breaking out in the Middle East.
This doesn't bode well for us anywhere in the globe.
But we'll just park that part for a second.
They're talking about developing a cross-border payment system.
So this is effectively the swift for BRICS.
Now, they're not just talking about it as in the early stages of brainstorming.
They're actually saying these things publicly.
They've been thinking about it, planning it for years, and they are in the process of doing it.
They're talking about having a grain exchange between the BRICS nations. So again, this is
talking about moving the exchanges and having exchanges that are there to compete with the
incumbent exchanges that we have in the likes of Europe, in Europe, the UK and the US.
So going in direct competition with this.
And then the most important one of these is an international precious metals exchange.
And they're going to be building that international precious metals exchange.
And again, these are not just ideas that they're brainstorming.
These are things that they have in place.
They have a look at, if you just have a look at the impact and the significance of the Shanghai exchange and how
that now is competing directly and taking business away directly from the exchanges in the UK and the
US. So there's all of these things. I think what we are seeing here, if you put this against the
backdrop, there's also a lot of talk about the unit,
as it seems to have been dubbed, which is the unit of currency, the BRICS. So there are plans
in place there to create this common currency. This isn't something that we haven't seen before.
We did it here in Europe. We did it with the euro. But the thing is that there's an appetite
to have that currency backed by physical, tangible assets, primarily gold.
So what we have seen this year is the rally in the gold price is not a speculative rally as such.
What I mean by that is obviously central banks that are buying it.
But why is it that they're buying it?
They're not buying it because we have to hold some of our assets in gold
and gold, you know, there's value to be had here.
It would appear that what's being said
is that gold is going to play a fundamentally
more important role in the monetary system for these countries.
So it's not from an investment point of view, it's from the point of view that this is going
to underpin their currency going forward. It's going to be part of that monetary system for the
BRICS countries. Now, if you think about it, if they're kind of letting those messages out now,
and they're not saying this is definitely going to be 40%, we're going to release a currency,
we're going to launch a currency rather and have it 40% backed by gold.
If we were to see that, if they were to hear that, you'd see the price of gold skyrocket overnight.
They're obviously not there yet.
They still got a year or two years, maybe in order to get everything in place.
These things don't happen overnight. But the
central banks within these currencies are looking at their reserves and they are putting gold onto
their balance sheet now for a specific reason down the line. Okay. And that seems to be coming,
there have been rumors about this for the last number of years, but that seems to be coming
clearer and clearer and clearer. And they probably have not
finished. And by that, I mean they probably do not have enough gold on their balance sheets yet.
They don't have enough gold as their reserves yet in order to meet whatever criteria that they have
set in order to meet the criteria of this BRICS unit. So we're going to see continued buying,
I believe, throughout this year and the next year
until those central banks
get their gold reserves to a certain level.
And that won't happen in isolation
because you're also seeing certain central banks
in Europe and elsewhere adding to their gold reserves.
So there is this appetite certain central banks in Europe and elsewhere adding to their gold reserves.
So there is this appetite that has arisen over the last couple of years,
and it is underpin this rally this year,
and it will underpin gold prices for the next couple of years as well.
Thank you for that summary.
You've obviously tracked it a lot more closely than I have, but I want to test one thing that I heard from Putin, because you mentioned New World Order, and that can be a term that can mean lots of things for different people.
I think when George Bush Sr. uttered the term, it had a different connotation than perhaps when Putin said it, I hope, maybe. is that this new monetary system that they're proposing or thinking about or planning right now,
he said very clearly, and this was before the BRICS conference, I wonder if this was echoed in the BRICS conference,
that it's not going to be under anyone control.
It's not like China leads it and we all sort of map into that or Russia leads it. going to be decentralized and and that it can't be based on um anyone like like just trusting that
the other partners doing fine things with it the united states has been abusing its reserve currency
role to the extent that we're just printing money like crazy and throwing it out the door um and and
without really having the economic growth to really support that so so fine is that is that
what he was talking about is like
listen we want to come up with a new way but it's really more about individual sovereignty
mapping into a system that they can all trust or verify in in some way yeah i suppose you can look
at it this way and you can say okay well we've had the you know we've had the u.s dollars the
reserve currency for um so many decades.
If we were to look at the success or otherwise of that,
and if we were to look at the flaws of that,
what would we want to change about it?
Well, you'd kind of want to ensure that it wasn't in the hands of just one country
because of the risk of that being abused.
You'd want a degree of transparency.
You'd want it backed by something that abused. You'd want a degree of transparency.
You'd want it backed by something that was tangible and physical to a degree so that there was a floor under which it could be manipulated, managed.
And I think really what's happening,
and you've got to admire the logic on a certain level, which is to say, what they want is not to move away from the dollar.
What they want is stability going forward.
And they don't have that stability now.
They don't want to be held hostage by somebody being able to seize their assets and take those and hand them to their enemy, right?
So they're looking at these things and saying,
well, if we had a blank sheet of paper,
how would we actually want to design a reserve currency
where so many countries could be involved in it?
And we wouldn't just have to trust them,
it being a fiat currency, you know, by decree,
but that we could actually set certain parameters.
And as long as they maintain those parameters,
we understand that there's a huge degree of stability
in whatever currency unit that is created out of that.
So there is a bit of wisdom in the logic,
looking at what has not worked over the last couple of decades
and trying to avoid those things.
And that's really what I think that this is about.
It's about, for them, it's about maintaining stability of their currency
and particularly amongst themselves,
because they're doing so much of their trading amongst themselves
and an increasing amount of trading amongst themselves.
So they say, well, if that's the case, why are we using a currency
that is external to the vast majority of our trading and our relationships?
Yeah.
It just makes sense on a level.
Well, it does.
And, of course, this will connect.
Trust me, I'll get there.
But one of the things that sort of emerged in this political cycle as we're recording this, we're right before the U.S. presidential elections.
And it's gotten very polemic and fractured
and the worst I've ever seen.
But at least one of the demarcation lines is between people who believe entirely different
things.
And I mean, really fundamental, like these Venn diagrams do not touch, right?
And these could be things about like equity and inclusion and diversity, all of that.
So if I'm a Putin, if I'm a President Xi, if I'm somebody from the outside peering in,
the trend has been for a couple decades now that, let me give you an example.
The United States had diversity targets for the Afghan army.
Didn't map really nicely into their culture. It was a
force fit. And we said, we're going to keep punishing you until you hit these targets of
ours. I think that when you mentioned that stability, the last thing you want is to be
tied to a system of currency where you don't know what the next hurdle is going to be that's going
to be imposed on you by these people who don't share your cultural values, but
insist you share theirs, but they can't even articulate how they got to those or when they
arose, right?
I think there's been a randomness to it.
So when on February 28th, 2022, when the United States weaponized the dollar against Russia
and froze its sovereign reserves, I think that was the starting gun for this particular conversation we're having.
Absolutely. Or at least it was the Philip. It was the thing that really gave it its impetus.
Because, and this is, when I talk about these things, I'm, you know, in no way defending what
led to that decision, which ultimately was the invasion of Ukraine.
We've got to separate these things out so we can actually analyze them.
But at that point in time, it really put down a marker, you know, or threw up a red flag, whatever the analogy you want to use is, to anybody else that was holding U.S. dollar assets.
Which said, OK, well, if it can happen to them,
it can happen to any one of us.
And it happened to them because of the evasion of Ukraine.
But who's the arbiter of what should determine whether your assets get frozen or not?
Why would you have that entity external to most of your trading activity. So 100%, that is the major motivation,
or the start, anyway, of why we've ended up here. Yeah, well, and out here in the cheap seats,
I didn't understand how that decision got made. I didn't see the congressional open public hearings.
I didn't see the debates.
I didn't see that Treasury and state and Federal Reserve officials were really chewing on this and looking at the pros and cons.
It just got announced out of the State Department one day, right?
Yeah.
It didn't take a genius to say that this thing wouldn't have unintended consequences.
So in situations like this, they either understood that and took the decision anyway, or they didn't.
So one way it's deliberate and the other way it's incompetent.
I don't know enough to know which one of those it actually
was, but it was externally looking at that very unwise decision. Sorry, that's an understatement.
The most unwise decision, because it has led to massive unintended consequences that is going to directly impact the U.S. economy going forward.
Yeah. And in very easily predictable ways. So this thing happened, and here we are talking
about a couple of years later, but David, it was like the next day I'm on FinTwit and everybody's
talking about these unintended consequences that we could all foresee, right? And anybody with a
head on their shoulders can say, oh, well, I see what you're
trying to do, but here's a lot of things that probably are also going to happen.
And now they're happening.
And the most predictable of those was, wow, you've just weaponized the dollar.
People are, countries are now disincentivized to continue holding dollars.
Okay.
I could understand that if you did that and it was a conscious decision you took.
If you also had a strong decision for how you're going to defend the dollar anyway.
Instead, we've had the most colossal new deficits being rung up in the interim period, right?
A trillion dollars in 100 days, 2.3 trillion of new debt slapped on last fiscal year.
Looks like we're on track over the next five months to tack on
another one nine next five months just because of reasons. Right. And it doesn't seem to be slowing
down. So the Fed cuts rates. Yeah. And it doesn't it doesn't seem it doesn't seem to be. Not only
does it not seem to be slowing down, it doesn't seem to have the capacity to slow down.
Right, right. I think that's the problem here.
You've lost control of it, ultimately.
We talked about this last month, and we talked about the idea of U.S. net interest expense, where we looked at the top four budget expenses. You've got
interest payment, 980 billion, nearly a trillion. You've got defence, 940 billion, again, nearly a
trillion. And then between Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security, they're about 1.4 and 1.8, so 3.2.
So you've got those top four are something like 5.2 trillion.
And the revenue coming in is 5 trillion.
So they're greater, what you're spending on your top four things
are greater than the entire tax revenue that you're
taking in and that's the top four when you bring in everything else you're talking what are you
looking at seven eight trillion that's unsustainable and the thing about it is if you
look at those top four you don't have the ability to get them
under control you don't have the ability to go in and cut your social social security your medicare
medicaid cut your social security what do you do you actually end up creasing your economy you push
yourself directly into a into a recession and then what does that do well that actually reduces down
your tax take you've um because you've got this burgeoning deficit,
you've got a
growing interest expense, you've got very little
ability to
control that. And it looks like the Fed
has lost control over the long end
because what happens, they're cutting rates and yields are going
higher. So
they've lost their ability to influence
treasury markets to the
same degree as they have in the past.
We're at a situation in the globe where geopolitical tension is higher than it has been since the Cuban Missile Crisis.
So you ain't going to be cutting your defence budget.
If anything, that's going to continue to grow. So the capacity to do anything about it is,
it's just not there. So we're, we're, this is such an important point because, you know,
so the Fed cut rates gave the so-called kind of an emergency 50 basis point cut there on September
18th. And surprisingly, every single interest rate,
except for the shortest of the short end, right, which they can control, has gone up in interest
yield since that moment in time. It was sort of like sell the rumor, you know, buy the rumor,
sell the news moment there. So if we just look at this really quickly. So here we see the three
month and yep, the yield has come down a little bit over the past
month because that used to be standing at 5.4 ish now it's at 4.5 so they did manage to drive the
three month yield down everything else particularly the long end here we're looking at um the 12
month here let me get my little little lasery pointery thing out the 12 month is up 28 basis points that's 0.28 a full
half a percent is the two-year 0.56 or 56 basis points is the five-year 49 basis points or half
a percent the 10 years higher 30 years higher everything's gone the other direction this is
new behavior for me david i don't this is not what I've seen in past cutting cycles.
Sure, sure.
The short end, obviously, you know, because it's only a short end note, you cut rates,
the short end is going to come down.
Traditionally, you would expect that yields on the longer ends would also come down when
you cut rates.
The reality is, though, that, you know, the bond issuance effectively,
okay, you're borrowing money.
What are you doing?
You're borrowing money against future potential earnings.
Right?
And it's no different for a country government
as it is for you or I.
You know, if we go to buy a house,
we can't pay for the house in cash,
so we borrow against our future earnings.
I think what you're seeing now is the realisation
that there's a debt crisis looming and the ability to continue to fund is significantly
disimproved than it has over the last number of years. So what happens then? You see a sell-off
in rates. What does that mean? means well okay if i want if i um
i need a higher i need a higher rate of return in order to take on this risk that's ultimately
that's ultimately what it is you maybe have a couple of the bond vigilantes now who are just
saying this is it that the the model is broken in the us um deficits are crazy. The national debt is crazy. The unfunded liabilities is out of control.
You're just shy of a trillion in interest payments. These things, as we've been saying
for years, are unsustainable. But it was Keynes who said, you know, markets can stay irrational longer than you
can stay solvent. They were, you could look down the line and say, we've got a problem coming.
And maybe you were a couple of years too far ahead of your time, which meant that people get
this sense of, well, this time it's different because, you know, you're saying these things
are out of control, but oh, look, they've got more out of control and nothing's happened yet.
And then again and again and again and again and again, it does get to a tipping point
at one stage.
It becomes unsustainable at some point.
And these things aren't happening in a vacuum, right?
They're happening against the backdrop of the geopolitical tension.
They're happening against the backdrop of division in the
US. They're happening against the backdrop of the BRICS situation. So, you know, the ability to fund
long term is so much impacted by the development in the BRICS, because now you had a whole block of nations
that would be buying US treasuries
that potentially will have an alternate
that is more stable,
where they will not have the same foreign exchange risk
that they would in US treasuries.
You're seeing a situation where geopolitical tension, an increase of that,
as you say, what does that mean? It's going to be a massive increase in defence spending,
as well as the destabilising effect of a hot war, whether it's in the Middle East or whether it's
actually on the continent of Europe. The destabilizing effect of that on the global
economy and what that will mean. And then, as it's talked about, is the division in the US.
Those things do not bode well in and of themselves. So, I'm saying this thing is not happening in a vacuum.
It's happening against the backdrop
of all of this going on.
Increase in geopolitical tension,
increase in division,
the BRICS,
and then not even to mention the downturn
in the Chinese economy as well.
There's an old story, I'm sure you've
heard it, about the kind of frog and the pot of boiling water, that if you throw a frog into a
pot of boiling water, he'll jump straight out. But if you put him into a pot of cold water and
turn the heat up gradually until it comes to a boil, he'll stay there until his skin falls off.
Now, I don't know whether that's true, and I'm not going to go out and actually test it,
but that's what it feels like at this moment in time.
We would only have to go back prior to the invasion of Ukraine
and ask ourselves,
what do you think will happen to financial markets
if there was a war on the continent of Europe,
there is increasing tension, and we're on the precip there was a war on the continent of Europe, there is increasing
tension and we're on the precipice of a war between Israel and Iran, that there is a massive
trading block, which has 40 plus percent of global population that are going to launch
their own currency backed by precious metals and division in the US.
You'd say, where do you think gold prices would be under all of that?
You'd say, oh, I'd say probably $5,000, $8,000 an ounce.
Well, so can we talk about the cross-currents then?
Because so the typical model, which you would know better than I, because of all your time
working in the financial system, is the risk on, risk off, right?
So risk on, we buy equities.
Risk off, we buy treasuries.
So on one model, we're seeing equities been bill approved.
They continue to march higher.
That's risk on.
Maybe the treasuries are signaling risk off.
However, against that backdrop, we have this, which is one of my preferred measures of liquidity in the system
has been bitcoin it's been very reliable it's saying here we're seeing that bitcoin is rising
in u.s dollar terms at the same time the u.s treasury yield is rising so if treasury yields
are risk off and bitcoin is risk on gold seems to be a risk-off model. And as well, we could
throw oil into this mix. And oil is clearly signaling nearly catastrophic recession, the way
you can't get a bid right now and just get slammed over and over again. How do we begin to make sense
of all these cross-currents? Is it risk-on, risk-off, or is that the wrong model? It's now
we have to look at these backdrop factors and uh now we can
start to map this in because this is kind of new behavior for me i can't i don't have an easy model
for what i'm seeing yeah well i suppose those models worked over the last uh couple of decades
when you know geopolitical tension was lower um when uh you more internal harmonious relationships in the US,
less division.
You had where global trade was very strong
and it was not just very strong, but it was consistent.
We were able to, from one year to the next,
we were able to kind of predict China was on an ascendancy.
There was a good working model there, the ability
of the US to issue new debt. There was a market and an appetite for that, a fairly stable market
and appetite for that. Those were all of the, they were the backdrops against the models that you're
talking about, worked.
We've got a lot of uncertainty at the moment.
And that's a word that gets bandied around a lot.
And what I mean by that is we're saying there's uncertainty because there's geopolitical tension.
There's uncertainty because we don't know what's going on in the BRICS.
Uncertainty because we don't know what's going on with the BRICS. Uncertainty, we don't know what's going on with the US election. But you can actually also, the opposite of uncertainty is certainty, right? And
as we get, as things develop, we can become quite certain that there will be a war.
We can become quite certain that the BRICS will launch a currency and it will be backed by
precious metals. We can be quite certain that division in the US will launch a currency and it will be backed by precious metals.
We can be quite certain that division in the US is going to get to such a stage where there's going to be societal implications. We can become quite certain. At this moment in time, a lot of that is
in flux. So a lot of the markets we're looking at today, the old models don't work and we don't
necessarily have them because we're in that state of flux.
And when we get certainty around some things, we'll know, OK, well, it's definitely a risk off.
But it's also going to be complicated by how governments and how central banks respond to this.
More than likely, we have seen in times of crisis how central banks respond.
They've only got one play.
They turn on the printing press.
To what degree do they turn on the printing press?
Will influence what happens in stock markets.
It'll influence what's going to happen in Bitcoin.
It'll influence what will happen
in the precious metals markets and in the bond markets.
Depending on what happens geopolitically will determine whether the US dollar is seen in the bond markets. Depending on what happens geopolitically
will determine whether the US dollar is seen as the safe haven.
OK, so the treasuries are seen as a safe haven.
There's a slight difference between a global reserve currency
and a safe haven in terms of crisis.
Historically, over the last number of decades,
it has always been a flight to the dollar.
It's considered a flight to quality.
Does that model still stand?
That's yet to be tested.
Why? Because we haven't had a real test of that in decades.
We haven't had a real test.
You know, we haven't had a global war since the 40s.
So those models are yet to be tested.
So we're in that state of flux at this moment, I believe.
And as a result of being in that state of flux,
we are getting markets acting in ways that they don't normally act.
And the correlations that existed previously are starting to break down.
That's ultimately, I think, where we're at the moment.
Yeah, well, a corollary to uncertainty is lack of trust.
So we've had a lot of erosion of trust.
And I see, so I've been on this bandwagon for a long time.
So I'm Mr. like low trust over here, because I don't trust what the Federal Reserve does,
right?
I don't trust what they say.
I trust what they do, right? I don't trust that there hasn't been an audit of them ever that's quality. They say, oh, we've handed our balance sheet over to somebody,
and they said the number's tied, but that's not an audit. I mean, transaction level,
where did the money go, and how did you deploy it kind of thing? It'd be interesting, right?
Absolutely.
Yeah, we know that they said, oh, for their disaster preparer desk after Superstorm Sandy, they got religion.
They moved the FOMC New York trading desk from New York to Aurora, Illinois, where it's co-located with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange options and futures pits, right?
Interesting, you know, and that was right around the same time when all of my market things started to go a little haywire. And so, and I know that the Chicago Mercantile Exchange,
you can still go on their website and they have a central bank preferred incentive program.
They're such large volume buyers of CME products that their website lists and they get, David,
they get futures pricing and options pricing. I salivate over like really they get the best deals because they are the highest volume participants.
But they never disclose on any central bank balance sheet when they bought or sold a future or put on any particular commodity index, treasury bond or gold or silver.
But we know they do it right.
So it's in that backdrop of lack of transparency. I kind of now have to just sort of like try and peer through the fog and understand what's going on.
So one way I look at this, I say, look, Bitcoin is going up.
Gold is going up.
To me, those represent kind of the same story, which is we think there's going to be a lot more printing coming.
I could look at them both that way.
Yes.
Absolutely.
It's the only play they got in the bag.
And you know that it will happen.
It's just a case of when,
and then it's a case of what are the implications,
what are the implications for the stock market,
the bond market,
what's the implications for inflation.
The only way that we talked about the debt
and the levels of debt
and the increasing level of interest payments
on those debt, the only thing that they the increasing level of interest payments on those debt.
The only thing that they can do is inflate away that debt.
It's the only thing.
It's what I call the Fed's, Federal Reserve's Kobayashi Maru.
I don't know if you're a Star Trek fan, but the Kobayashi Maru was a test that was given
to Starfleet captains.
They were put in a certain situation and no matter what they did,
the test was designed, they were going to fail.
And Captain Kirk, he famously in the canon of Star Trek,
beat the Kobayashi Maru.
And the way that he beat it was to reprogram the system.
And ultimately, if they continue on the way that they do,
using the plays that they've used in the past,
there are only a set number of outcomes,
and neither of these are positive.
So ultimately, what you're going to see at a certain stage
is the Federal Reserve's Kobayashi Maru,
where they effectively reprogram the system
right so i i saw a little surprise on your face so i pulled it up i typed it in this is coming
straight off of the cme website right very easy to find the central bank incentive program
right there for everybody who doesn't know the the Chicago Mercantile Exchange is where you trade
the most highly levered products.
Those are futures and options.
Could be puts and calls on indexes.
You can buy E-minis.
You can buy maxis.
You can buy gold, silver, sell, all that stuff.
But it goes all the way down.
Look at this.
Standard customer rates.
The central is the CBIP. Look at this. Standard customer rates. The central, it's a CBIP.
They get a 38% savings.
I'm like, David, why does a central bank need a 38% savings?
They print money out of thin air.
Why do they get a savings?
Why do they get an incentive program?
Yes.
But Bitcoin futures, it's right there.
They're in it. Central banks have access to Bitcoin futures and it's in such a volume. They're like, look, we'll give you we'll give you a three percent. We'll give you a little taste.
It's scary, isn't it?
Isn't that something?
That is scary.
It's right there.
Shocking. So, at any rate, that's one of these backdrops,
because we don't know what our central banks are doing.
They don't disclose it.
They have unlimited firepower,
so they're busy doing whatever they're doing, yeah?
And it's a very tricky investing environment, I think.
It's a tricky investment, yeah.
I mean, the opacity is incredible incredible here which leads to a lot of
speculation um and it is a it is a tricky investing environment uh and if you think about the you know
what we're talking about the bond market um and the implications for the bond market will mean that
uh the the traditional 60 40 equ equities bond portfolio is not the thing
that's going to carry you on into the future the way it has performed over the last couple of
decades. There is a paradigm shift here. And it's a paradigm shift not just because of how the US
or the Federal Reserve has managed the monetary system over the last number of
years.
But there's a paradigm shift because of the kind of secondary implications of how it's
been managed.
And that's where you've seen the rise of the BRICS.
There's secondary implications because of the geopolitical tension.
So we are in that state of flux. I do believe that we are in a paradigm shift. The old rules don't apply. They don't apply during periods. Everybody has a fight
plan until they get punched in the face. We're looking at geopolitically,
we're looking at a situation that we have not seen since the 40s, the late 30s, early 40s.
There is a higher chance of a global, a world war than we have had in a long time.
And it's
kicking off already.
All it needs is for some of
these dots to be joined up.
Israel
and Iran are firing missiles at each other.
And they don't,
for most people who don't realise, they don't have a border
with each other.
They're firing these missiles over other countries.
Israel has, you know, that there's incursions into Lebanon.
It's destabilizing in the Middle East.
And you've got a situation where Russia and China will come to the aid of Iran if things increase.
So we've got a new axis developing there.
These are very, very dangerous times.
And if you were tasked, if you were an investor in the mid-30s,
knowing what's coming down the tracks, how would you be investing? Would you
think that the models of the previous decade were going to fit with what comes in the following
decade? You know, investing through, is it really investing? It's protecting your wealth.
We're going through such a period of flux that you know this is about wealth preservation wealth protection you know if you
come out the other side um healthy and and and still hanging on to your wealth there may be
opportunities for you but between now and then it's very much about wealth preservation. Absolutely.
And for me, Dave, this is for, I've been a gold and silver investor since like around 2000.
And I've only added to my position since then.
The only time I sell silver, I do sell it, is when a niece, a nephew, somebody doesn't have any and they're kind of interested.
And so I'll bust out the big old thing of junk silver and say, have at it know and uh sell it to him below spot right just to get him started because i'm kind of a dealer that way
you know but you gotta teach you gotta teach them you can't just give it to them for free
but i'll get a deal you know right there but otherwise i've just been adding and adding and
part of the reason for that is, is that I truly believe in,
in the old adage, I think it was Jesse Livermore, but I might have this wrong, who said,
find the trend that is wrong and bet against it. I'm convinced that the trend has been,
the thing I'm betting against is that the United States has been in sort of,
they say nothing fails like success. So the United States has been in the driver's
seat for so long, I don't think it understands what happens, that that's not a possibility.
Of course it is. History changes all the time. Is a big geopolitical realignment going to happen
in my lifetime? Maybe, maybe not. Don't know. But I'm betting against that trend, which is
they've been running a system. And here's my, you and I were talking about this before we hit record,
which is that, I can't pull it up right now, but if I gave me a minute, I could, but I have a chart
that somebody put together that said, look, if I bought silver and sold silver in two separate
time periods, period one, at the beginning of the open of the U.S. market, which is driven by the
paper's futures market, which now has a central bank preferred program, which we know about. Right. And I sold it at the end of that market. So that's from 830
till when is that? Uh, four o'clock. That's your period silver over the last 20 years from where
you started would have, would be worth today, 11 cents per ounce. Whereas if you held it in time
period two, which is the other time period,
soon as the U.S. market closes, while the rest of the world is buying or selling, and you held it from there till the overnight when the U.S. market opens and sold then, silver today is worth $373
an ounce. So here's what it looks like to me. I see this over and over again. This is not a market
to me. This is silver. This is today. This is a one-day market. We're looking at a one-minute candle. I have my cursor right here
at 8.30 at the open of the U.S. market. I think you can see it's kind of flat all through here,
but the very second the U.S. market opens, volume comes racing in and it gets sold.
That's what we do. David, I see this pattern between eight and 10.
This has been happening for months now. Okay. And let me connect that to something. Jesse
Colombo puts this chart up and he says, okay, this way over here, if you can't see it, this is
August of 2021, August of 2022, August of 2023, August of 2024. These are the non-swap dealer positions. These
are the bullion banks. And you see, sometimes they go, they sell some of their paper silver.
Sometimes they buy, sometimes they sell. Here's a little more selling, but you see when the price
goes down, they're covering all their shorts and they're buying long here, right? But basically
they go up and down. Well, starting here, where silver was at 23 an ounce,
during its entire rise to 33 an ounce,
they have been doing nothing but piling on shorts.
200 million ounces, paper ounces of shorts.
So this is the trend I bet against.
I think these guys and gals, they've had their way for a long time.
What normally happens, how this resolves, you know better than I, 2.30 in the morning, there's a
massive, big, crushing dump of cell orders that just rip through everything. You wake up, there's
blood in the streets, people panic out, and then they do this. They close their shorts out,
and off we go. That's been the model for a long time i think this is gonna
have to break at some point i really do and i know people have been saying that for a long time
but well there's a couple there's a couple yeah there's a couple of lenses to look at that through
so if you look at all the if you look the to the left of that chart those red lines
um but as they build up their shorts what happens happens to the price next? Look at that.
Falls.
Each time.
Each time.
Up until the last time.
Each time.
Build up the shorts.
Falls.
Build up the shorts.
Falls.
Each time.
All right?
Now, again, if you look back to the left-hand side of the chart,
the way to read that is, well, they've made money each time.
They've built up a short position.
It's driven the market lower.
They've squared up. They've made money. And even if you look at the black lines on the top of that, they start made money each time. They've built up a short position, they've stripped the market lower, they've squared up, they've made money.
And even if you look at the black lines on the top of that,
they start to go long.
What happens when they get a cumulative long position?
What happens?
Make money.
Make money.
Make money.
Right?
So if you have a system that works that cleanly over time, because you are, it's, you can call it manipulation,
but you're the, you're the
ape in the room, right? You've got the deep pockets. You've got, you have the ability to
take the large position sizes because this is not necessarily more buyers than sellers or more
sellers than buyers as the, the, the phrase normally goes. This is to do with the size of
those buyers and the size of those sellers.
They have the ability, if they're on the sell side,
to overwhelm all the buyers.
To just hit every bid that there is all the way down
till they exhaust them.
And not only do they exhaust them, they scare them.
They scare them to death by going long.
And then what do they do?
They buy up the market again.
But there's
something that just don't there's something that just dawned on me that i don't um i don't think
anybody has spoken about when we talk about this trend of selling during u.s hours and
buying during asian hours that if we think about it what that actually means is there's a huge appetite in Asia for silver.
They buy a lot of silver.
So what happens every day in the U.S. markets?
The U.S. markets make silver cheaper for the Asians to buy.
Every day.
So they come in and go, thank you, U.S. markets.
I love a bit of that.
And they buy it.
This is the opportunity, right?
I love cheaper silver.
They've been giving us cheaper silver for a long time. And before we move on, these awesome charts come from Jesse Colombo.
He's at the Bubble Bubble here.
I follow his work. It's good stuff.
And, of course, also TF Metals.
Follow that as well.
Because this is an awesome chart.
Because you're right, you can see the pattern for years.
And we could show this pattern going back many, many more years.
It's just a three-year window here.
But you're right.
The ups and downs, these guys are just ringing the cash register.
But it stopped working here.
And that's worth noting.
It has stopped, yeah.
But the pattern has been there for so long.
And the trading strategy has been there for so long that when this starts happening that the initial reaction is oh we got to just add on to our shorts and
then happens a bit more oh if we do more we'll do more we'll do more there is always there is
always a point where there is a tipping point on these things we don't know what it is um we don't
know there might there may be a market event or there might be a a a bank failure or there will
be there can be something um that will be that tipping point we don't know what that is we don't
know how deep the pockets are we don't know how much appetite for risk that they actually have
but the reality is that if metal prices continue to go higher at some stage something breaks for
them yeah it just hasn't broken yet Yeah. It just hasn't broken yet.
And we know it hasn't broken yet because they're still adding on to their shorts.
Well, they're playing a paper game and it's very fancy and I'm sure it makes a lot of
sense, but India is playing a different game.
They're playing a physical game.
So I'm a fundamentalist, you know, so in this regard, so I read stuff and India is talking
about how they have solar is going to play more and more of a role, at least over the next five to seven years.
So that requires a lot of silver.
I was shocked.
You and I talked about this.
I still haven't figured out how to make sense of this.
But the fact that in January of 2024, this year, India somehow bought 2,700 tons of silver from the UAE.
And I didn't even know the UAE was a player in the silver market until I read that.
I mean, it was like such a shocking amount because that's basically 110% of world mine output in one month,
you know, for that month of January, went to one country from one other country.
I couldn't make sense of the numbers.
I'd never seen anything like it.
And it was just announced in some, you know, international business newspaper as if it was just like a thing you said you know
yeah i mean there's massive appetite for there is massive appetite for silver and a growing
appetite for silver um i'm always conscious uh when i talk about these i'm passionate about
talking about these things but i'm also i'm also conscious that people look and say well you know
he's a bullion dealer so he's always going to be bullish about these things, but I'm also conscious that people look and say, well, you know, he's a bullion dealer,
so he's always going to be bullish on these things.
I own gold and silver myself,
so I really believe in these things.
There is a massive appetite for silver,
particularly in the East.
There's massive applications for silver
and a growing list of applications for silver,
not least of which is
this environmental angle to it, the greening of the electrical grid effectively, solar panels.
That's going to be a massive demand factor over the next number of years.
The interesting thing when we look at the paper market
versus the physical market,
because effectively that's what we're talking about,
because no matter how cheap or how expensive it is,
paper silver can never be used in a solar panel.
You need the physical stuff.
I have always been of the belief for many years
that we will actually see a break in the paper market
when we see the margins on physical silver increase right because what that they will
they will only increase it won't be out of greed it'll be a supply demand they will increase because
of the demand for the physical because paper silver does not reflect only the physical does are you are you
tracking that at the thousand ounce bar is that that would be the the premiums there you would
you would see you would see that there yeah i mean the thousand ounce bars are the industrial size
bars you can buy them as a you can buy them as an investor they're not very attractive they're quite
they're quite large they're not very very visible. So they're very heavy.
So they're not good for investors like yourself or myself.
But in terms of where you will see that disconnect happening and that increase in the margins of those, it will be on those 1,000 ounce bars. So when you see the premiums on those things going up over time,
that's when you know that it's going to be a disconnect
between the physical silver market
and the paper silver market.
Until that point, there is enough physical silver
to meet with demand side.
We also got to remember as well
that there's a massive amount of,
we talk about the ratio of physical silver to paper silver.
We got to remember that there is effectively an unlimited ability to create contracts in the futures market, as long as there's somebody on the far side of it.
Okay, so an unlimited ability to create derivatives.
That does not require an ounce of physical silver to back those things,
because the vast majority of those things are cash settled. And to put that in perspective,
I'm quite sure that a lot of people that are listening to this now will actually have their
own spread betting accounts and will bet on the price of silver going up. That's literally the
same thing as these. That's a derivative contract. There is no physical ounce of silver that backs that,
and there never will be.
There's somebody else that's taking your trade.
You'll never be able to physically settle that
for an ounce of silver.
So the existence of that
adds a fantastic amount of liquidity to the market,
which has been great for the silver for all futures markets over the years.
But the extent to which that has grown now has meant,
has allowed these large apes, large whales, whatever you want to call them,
in to be able to overwhelm the market on the buy side or the sell side,
whenever it is that they want.
That's the challenge.
That's the thing that has gotten out of control.
So this talks about saying,
well, there's never going to be enough physical silver
to back all of the paper silver.
That's not the intention for the vast majority
of those paper silver ounces.
They are literally just effectively contracts for difference.
That's what you're entering into there
that will be cash settled.
So therefore, if we look to, right,
well, you can trade those at spot all day long,
but the reality is you can't get an ounce of silver for that that's what we're talking about here so
when those thousand ounce bars from an industrial perspective start to command um a higher premium
that's when we're going to see i believe that's where we're going to see the disconnect between
the paper and the physical market well and um again these games can continue until they can't uh and then we have to just you know
what what will happen you and i both might well maybe you think different my trust is so low i
think we're going to see another hunt brothers kind of thing the system will do whatever it has
to do to protect the big players because they let them ring the cash register but when they really
get in trouble they change the rules right we saw this most recently with the london metal exchange
on the nickel contracts which was one of the most egregious things I'd ever seen. There were 5,933
contracts that were long and got that story right. There was one big player that was over-concentrated,
was a Chinese firm, got caught with its pants down. And instead of letting that firm go down
and then have to dip into their own capital to make up the shortfalls, which is what an exchange is supposed to do, is manage that appropriately.
They just broke the rules and said, we're invalidating those contracts and zeroing them out.
Right. Lots of lawsuits followed and all of that.
But it was not how the game is supposed to work.
What's your faith that if the paper market breaks for silver the game will be played fairly versus
yeah if we see yeah if we if we see a similar situation to what you're talking about there yes
there will be um there will be there will be moves made um to i'm gonna use the term right
that ship but it's not really there will would be to compensate, to fix it.
But what that does, as you said,
it erodes trust.
The reliance, the credibility,
the integrity that an exchange will have post that
will be a fraction of what it has prior to that event.
And what you will see then is, I mean, we've got the BRICS countries
talking about an international precious metals exchange.
For this sort of a reason, I bet, too, right?
Yeah.
So, you know, and you can even see that the Shanghai exchange,
that there's a premium coming out of the Shanghai exchange
because of the demand for metal locally.
So it's more reflective of real market dynamics.
So maybe a BRICS, International Precious Metals Exchange,
is set up more from a, I never thought I'd be hearing you say this,
more from a perspective of fairness
than what we have at the moment to avoid again look at you know they take the same mentality
and say we'll look at what the problems with said the reserve current using the dollars or
reserve currencies what can we do differently to ensure stability going forward yep why would
they not take the same attitude towards an international precious metals exchange?
Well, exactly. And this is getting to the heart of actually why I hold so much of my wealth.
And again, I'm irresponsibly long. Both gold and silver have been for a long time.
And it connects back to this other thing that I investigated heavily, which was around this concept of something called the great taking,
which is that the legal machinery to legally take people's assets has been installed. Now, whether the trigger gets pulled or not, you know,
a lot of people say it couldn't, it wouldn't, but still it sits there. And so the question is, again,
rather than wonder and speculate about just how fair the system's going to be in a moment of
crisis, I'm just going to go with everything I've seen for the past 15 years, 20 years and go, probably not as fair as I'd like it to be. And I just want my
stuff out of the system as much as I can. And that's where GoldCore steps in and other places.
Listen, everybody should have gold and silver, in my opinion, in their hot little hands, your
insurance basket, right? Whatever that means to you, right? You just want to make sure you always
have that. Okay. It's somewhere you can access it, safely store that. But for a lot of people, you want
to spread your risk out a little bit, or you don't want to hold it all yourself, or you want to hold
it in different jurisdictions, which is my main thing. So I don't even know how the U.S. experiment
is going to go. I got a little uncertainty about what's going to happen over the next few months
and years here, right? So those are my reasons for having internationally secured vaulted storage,
which is really code speak for out of the system.
It's not a bank account.
It's not in a bank.
It's not subject to any of those great taking rules.
There's no legal machinery I found where they can reach in and just grab that,
you know, based on anything that's on the books that I understand.
Yeah, indeed.
And I bring this back to my concept of the Fed's Kobayashi Maru.
It's a no-win situation.
So they're just left with one choice, and one choice is to reprogram the system.
So what does that mean?
Well, that could be the great taking.
It could be a new world order.
It could be a new monetary system.
We don't know.
And it's impossible to pinpoint. So what's the best way is to not play the game, to step out of
the game. Step out of the system. Precious metals is an excellent way for you to step out of the
system. It's a physical, tangible asset. You can hold it in your hand. You can store it safely in a jurisdiction that you do not live in.
It gives you that ability to hedge that jurisdictional and that geographic risk.
You're not talking about putting everything at a distance, but at least some. It's an insurance,
it's like an insurance contract against jurisdictional risk. As we see, we are seeing an increase in division in the States.
We don't know what that means and how that will play out.
So there is wisdom to not holding everything within that jurisdiction, spread it out.
It's a risk mitigation tool.
That's ultimately what it is.
So many people over the years have looked at it and kind of gone, oh, well, you know, the gold price hasn't done anything or hasn't performed this year as well as my stocks have performed or my bond portfolio has performed.
Well, this is a risk mitigation tool that is to protect you against uncertainty.
And what have we got now?
We've got growing uncertainty.
So, yeah, having precious metals outside of your jurisdiction that you can tap into, you can access the liquidity of that at a very short notice. You'll be able to sell down and have your dollars returned to you or yours returned to you or Sterling returned to you within a very short space of time.
We're talking, you know, a day or two.
That's important in this scenario.
Not having all your eggs
in one jurisdictional basket.
If you were to say this five years ago,
when we were saying it five years ago
or 10 years ago,
people would have looked at you
like you had two heads.
I agree.
But these things are becoming real now.
And what's the term you use?
You're long.
You're long, gold and silver.
Irresponsibly long.
Irresponsibly long, gold and silver.
Yeah.
Now, that's obviously your personal choice
and you have done your research
and you have got your finger on the pulse of the market, not just on the market, but on geopolitics as well. You understand that. So that's why you be irresponsibly long, but everybody should have some gold and
silver because that is the thing that is going to protect you in these times. Well, to be fair to
myself, my first big purchase of gold, it was $293 an ounce. So I'm very close to a 10 bagger on
that. That was now in 2000, just late 2000. However, so that's a long play but when i just put it into a spreadsheet and i
asked the question who did better me or the s&p i beat the s&p with that it's 8.9 compounded for
20 years right that's it's not bad and by the way i actually think all i really did was kept pace
with true inflation honest inflation that's it that's it you know that's it um now you will get
people that'll comment to say
you're not factoring in dividend yield on the s&p there but that wasn't why you that's why that's
not why you bought it right nominally yeah you have kept pace with that but it has given you
all of the benefits um there's uh but my point was it started out as this much of a piece of my pie
yeah and through my own it became this much it a piece of my pie. Yeah. And through my own, it became this much.
It became bigger.
Yes.
That's not your fault.
It was responsible and it became irresponsible at some point.
I just couldn't find a reason to sell it, you know.
Rick Rule, who I've interviewed on my channel a number of times,
and I'm quite sure you're very familiar with.
Yes.
Your community is very familiar with.
He always comes out with some great lines.
And one of the things that he said is that having gold in his portfolio
allows him to take greater risks
with the rest of his portfolio.
He sees it as that bedrock.
He knows that he will always have that
and always hold that.
The other thing he says as well
is that he doesn't buy gold
because it's going to $3,000 an ounce.
He buys gold because he fears
it's going to $9,000 or $10,000 an ounce.
And that might sound kind of a bit strange,
but the reality is he's basically saying,
what will the world look like
if gold is at $10,000 an ounce?
Eh.
I won't be dancing victory jigs,
I'm pretty sure.
That's the thing, isn't it?
That's the thing.
You know, a lot of people buy gold
and they hope that it doesn't go higher.
It is.
So it's not an...
It's not...
It can be an investment
as a speculative investment
where you buy it because you think the price is going higher.
But ultimately, what it's meant to be is an insurance policy against uncertainty.
It's that physical, tangible thing that is highly liquid that you have in your portfolio that will come into its own in times of need.
And that's with all of these various backdrops and this and that, and by the
way, um, um, I, I love silver, uh, because I understand it's industrial uses. I understand
the true fundamentals. I understand that there's been a supply demand shortfall on the supply side,
relative demand for five out of six years. And this will probably be make it six out of seven,
this coming year. Um, and because they're not opening new base metal mines
because the last so so most people don't know this there are a few pure place silver mines um you can
you can get into but not that many relative to the 70 that comes from base metal mining i'm talking
copper zinc those base metals and the last analysis that i got from so Sachs or JP Morgan, one of their commodity
desks looked at it and said, copper would need to be $35,000 a ton to justify opening
a new mine.
And currently it's at nine or 10,000, right?
So nobody's open and very few new mines are being opened.
So, you know.
And that's a moving scale as well,
because we've still got those inflationary pressures.
We saw Newmont come out with their results there
with the gold price significantly higher
than previously recorded.
And inflationary pressures
really squeezed the margin for them on that.
So, yeah, it's an interesting time.
70% of silver supply is mined as a byproduct.
So it means that you're mining copper,
you're mining zinc,
and you also happen to be mining silver.
Yeah.
So it's a very interesting market.
The underlying fundamentals really, really, really do support higher silver prices.
Silver is a monetary metal in the same way, but not to the extent that gold is viewed.
But it has a massive industrial play.
So there is a strong speculative investment case
for silver going forward,
particularly as we say with the rise of solar.
With all of the other applications that it has,
and has applications,
it's antibacterial, antimicrobial properties
heavily used in medical industry.
They are forever finding new uses for silver.
So there's a huge, in terms of investment cases,
a huge investment case for silver prices to go higher.
Oh, absolutely.
And by the way, so I like to endeavor to separate this out.
People often say, how do you feel about gold and silver?
As if it's a one word thing. They're two separate words. Okay. Yes. My gold, let's be clear. I believe JP Morgan,
the original, the OG back in early 1900 said, gold is money. Everything else is credit.
And I agree with that. I think gold has a role and there is a non-zero chance. This is the
optionality
price of gold, that it will be remonetized, maybe through the unit of the BRICS, maybe through some
other things. But it has an option value built into it. And of course, we've all seen the silly
things, like if we divide total known monetary gold by M2, you get these wackadoodle numbers,
right? You know, big five-digit things. I'm not not counting on that but it has a non-zero option
value that i think has been priced at zero and i don't understand why so that's one issue silver
is an industrial metal and the fact that i'm long silver david tells you that i'm optimistic because
i i know there's going to be an industrial use for it in the future right silver is a very optimistic
play for me because you know if we get into one of those
big shooting wars that breaks down our economies, you know, silver demand will probably collapse,
you know, for a variety of reasons. But I don't think that, you know, I really think long term.
There is military applications in it as well, unfortunately.
Unfortunately, yeah.
So that'll underpin some of the market, but definitely we'll have the industrial.
Again, it depends which way these things go.
Well, and that probably explains why, as a last comment.
I also heard from the BRICS, Putin said that they are restarting their strategic silver supply as a nation.
Did you hear that too?
Yes, yes.
Yeah. that too um yes yes yeah so again another aspect of the kind of fundamentals underpinning it
underpinning the investment case yep all right well david russell and gold core thank you so
much for your time again uh really i always look forward to these conversations you're so welcome
likewise chris let me know if any nine-digit orders come through. I definitely will.
All right.