Gold and silver in '26 - Richard Mills
(www.investorideas.com Newswire) The Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOM) is made up of exchange-traded futures on 22 commodities and is widely mimicked by ETFs and fund managers. On Nov. 28, 2025, the weighting for gold was at 19.4% and silver at 7.1%. On Jan. 8 the BCOM is set to change its 2026 target weight to 4.9% weighed to gold and 3.9% to silver.
This is happening on both precious metals because of the large price movements since the end of November. A very large rebalancing trade is going to start this week and continue over five business days. A lot of index funds mirror the BCOM and will have to rebalance starting the 8th.
But the bull market in gold and silver will continue.
The other thing making the news recently is the anticipated crash from a selloff in the PM markets where so many are comparing this period to the late ’70’s. I’ve done it to the early 1970’s, stagflation, but the difference is what happened in the later part of that decade. Former Fed Chair Paul Volcker jacked interest rates, yields spiked, the US dollar strengthened and the bull in PMs was over.
That is not happening this time, yields are 1%-bound starting in May; Trump wants a 1% Fed policy rate. So, absolutely yes to lower US interest rates. Trump takes control of the Federal Reserve in May, and it’s guaranteed to result in at least a half-point cut.
The Fed does not control long-term yields, just short-term. So, and it’s already happening, long yields go up, bond vigilantes will step in here as well, then the US Treasury really steps up, (they have been quietly buying) and starts buying the US debt rollover, and buying new US debt by printing money to buy short-term debt.
(There is a group of powerful investors that not only watch US Treasury yields closely, but they take an active part in influencing the bond market, especially if they don’t like the economic policies of the administration. Bond vigilantes are investors who sell government bonds in response to fiscal policies they view as inflationary or irresponsible, driving up borrowing costs for the government. — Investopedia definition)
The Fed is lowering rates in the face of rising inflation to goose the US consumer, which is 70% of US economy. This is the best thing the government could do if it wanted inflation to really soar, and let’s remember the US consumer already has record credit card, student loan and mortgage debt. And the US is shedding jobs.
US consumer debt hit a record high of approximately $18.6 trillion in late 2025, driven primarily by mortgages, but we’re also seeing significant increases in credit card and student loan balances, though student loan delinquencies are rising, indicating potential stress, especially for younger borrowers. The largest portions of this debt are mortgages (around $13 trillion) and auto/student loans, with credit card debt also at a peak of over $1.2 trillion.
Consumers have been the main engine of the U.S. economy. A healthy job market and solid, rising wages have largely fueled this spending. Looking back over the past two decades, average wages in the US have outpaced inflation more than 70% of the time. This has been particularly concentrated among high-income households, who are less affected by inflation and higher interest rates due to their rising net worths from assets like stocks and real estate.
However, it is important to note that, for a period between April 2021
and late 2022, the situation reversed as a surge in inflation (due to
supply chain issues and other global events) meant that prices rose
much faster than wages, eroding purchasing power. The current period
marks a recovery from that time. At AOTH we believe the current period
marks a recovery from that time.
In 2025 gold rocketed
higher due to a combination of factors, including safe haven demand
arising from numerous geopolitical hot spots — Gaza, Ukraine,
and recently, Venezuela — a lower US dollar which is always good
for metals prices; central bank buying; robust gold-backed ETF
inflows; a cooling US labor market; and the prospect of the Fed
lowering interest rates further this year.
There are also structural supply constraints on gold, silver and
copper. AOTH research has found that for all three metals, for the
past several years, supply can’t meet demand without
recycling.
The silver market continues its longest
streak of supply deficits in recent years, with the 2025 World Silver
survey noting 2025 was the fifth straight year of supply not meeting
demand. Mine production has fallen to 813 million ounces, unable to
keep pace with surging demand mostly from industrial (but also
monetary) applications.
While the many estimates
vary, their sources suggest there are roughly four to seven times more ounces of gold available above ground than
investable silver. The total amount of above-ground fine silver bullion for investment
is estimated to be around 3 to 3.5 billion ounces, much lower than
gold’s supply of approximately 7.6 billion ounces.
While most of the world’s mined gold is still around, either cast as jewelry, or smelted into bullion and stored for investment purposes, the same cannot be said for silver. It’s estimated that 60% of silver is utilized in industrial applications, leaving only 40% for investing. Of the 60% used for industrial applications almost 80% ends up in landfills.
From Kitco comes this interesting tidbit, “Despite gold’s ascent to successive all-time highs in
2025 and new all-time highs being made today, American institutional
and retail investors have maintained remarkably tepid exposure to the
precious metal, presenting what Goldman Sachs analysts characterize as
a significant structural opportunity for continued price
appreciation.”
From Jan. 1, China will
require exporters of silver, tungsten and antimony to obtain licenses from the Ministry of Commerce. This is
expected to further tighten the market for silver, since China is the
world’s second-highest silver producer behind Mexico.
In November 2025 silver was among 10 minerals the US Department of Defense added to the US Geological Survey’s 2025 List of Critical Minerals.
For the first time, silver was recognized as having growing importance to US economic and national security. This inclusion signals enhanced government focus on securing domestic supply chains through enhanced permitting, subsidies and strategic stockpiling initiatives.
Not 1979
2025 was the best year for gold since 1979, leading some commentators to draw parallels between that period in history and the present day. There are certainly geopolitical similarities. 1979 was when the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, and the year the Iranian Revolution spiked oil prices. In 2026, we have continued simmering hot spots in Ukraine and the Middle East, and the evolving crisis in Venezuela — all of which are boosting demand for gold.
2026 and 1979 also show a weak US dollar. As in the late 1970s, the dollar has weakened, making gold more attractive to holders of other currencies. The Street notes the first half of 2025 was the buck’s worst H1 performance since 1973. It ended 2025 about 10% lower.
But what happened in 1979 is extremely unlikely to happen in 2026.
Between 1979 and 1982, the Fed under Chairman Paul Volcker tackled the problem of high inflation by lifting interest rates to a historic high of 20%, causing a recession in the process.
Higher interest rates made US Treasuries attractive, which boosted demand for dollars. The dollar rose and gold prices tanked.
Today, despite similar economic conditions to 1979, the Fed is poised to do the opposite: cut interest rates and keep the dollar low.
The Street notes that, while inflation is nowhere near what it was in the late 1970s, about 8%, in 2025 it was “sticky”, meaning above the Fed’s 2% target. Normally this would result in the Fed hiking rates, but instead it has lowered them due to concerns over a soft labor market.
The Fed has cut short-term rates three times since September and they now range between 3.5 and 3.75%, the lowest since 2022. According to Fed fund futures, the market expects at least two quarter-point rate cuts next year.
As I mentioned at the top, Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s term expires in March and President Trump is widely expected to appoint a chair who agrees with his low-interest-rate stance. Trump has said he wants a 1% Fed rate policy, so the US is zero bound again.
Powell recently stated there is nothing to suggest concern about inflation in the long-term, so why are rates going up? As the two charts below show, the 10-year yield has risen from 3.99% on Nov. 26, 2025, to the current 4.16%, a gain of 0.17%, while the 30-year yield has gained 0.22% over the same period.
The Street observes that Expectations that the central bank’s independence may become
compromised in May have already led to market distortions. Long-term
interest rates have stayed higher than expected, even after the Fed
began cutting rates in September.
Another point of view says long-term rates currently
embed a premium due to uncertainty over Powell’s successor.
Even perceived interference by the government in Fed
policymaking could lead to higher long-term borrowing costs, BBVA
Research says. This would defeat the Trump administration’s
efforts to lower them…
According to analysts at
the CPM Group, “reduced faith in the U.S. central bank’s
independence already is and would continue to be very supportive of
gold and silver investment demand.
Central bank buying
Central bank buying continues to be a significant gold demand driver,
and increasingly, silver demand driver.
As trust in the
dollar, the leading reserve currency, is tested by inflation,
sanctions, and shifting alliances, many countries are turning to gold
as a store of value.
In the third quarter of 2025, central
banks globally bought an estimated 200 tonnes, 28% higher than the
second quarter and 6% above the five-year quarterly average.
According to ING, up to Dec. 8, year-to-date purchases totaled 254 tonnes, with
Poland the stand-out buyer at 531 tonnes, or 26% of total reserves.
China
bought gold for the 13th month in a row, in November
adding 0.93 tonnes or 30,000 ounces, bringing its total gold holdings
to 2,305 tonnes or 74.1Moz.
Among the countries considering buying more gold are South Korea,
which hasn’t bought bullion since 2013, Madagascar and
Serbia.
ING notes the pace of central bank gold buying
doubled following the freezing of Russia’s foreign exchange
reserves by the G7 and the European Union after Russia’s 2022
invasion of Ukraine.
In 2024, central banks bought a
combined 1,045 tonnes, with Poland, India and Turkey the largest
buyers, states the World Gold Council.
The combined
official gold reserves of BRICS member states now exceed 6,000 tonnes,
with Russia leading at 2,336 tonnes, followed by China with 2,298
tonnes and India with 880 tonnes. Brazil added 16 tonnes in September
2025—its first purchase since 2021—bringing its total
reserves to 145.1 tonnes.
The dual strategy of high internal gold production alongside the
accumulation of strategic reserves positions BRICS as both a key
supplier and a major influence in the physical gold market.
Between
2020 and 2024, central banks of BRICS member states purchased more
than 50% of the global gold supply, systematically reducing their
reliance on dollar-denominated assets.
A recent infographic by Visual Capitalist shows that Russia and China have stockpiled the most gold since
2000, more than triple the next highest country, India.
The
chart, which visualizes the net additions to official gold reserves
from 2000 to 2024, reveals that Russia narrowly edged out China with a
1,984-tonne increase compared to China’s 1,885 tonnes.
Why
are Russia and China hoarding gold? According to Visual Capitalist,
The dramatic increase in gold holdings by Russia and China is part
of a broader effort to reduce reliance on the U.S. dollar. After
facing Western sanctions, Russia has accelerated
its de-dollarization strategy, favoring gold to protect
reserves from seizure or devaluation.
China’s motives are also strategic. Amid trade tensions with
the U.S. and a growing desire to internationalize the yuan, Beijing
has been quietly amassing gold, often through discreet central bank
purchases and reported transfers from domestic mines.
Russia and China have also engaged in bilateral gold trade deals that bypass the US financial system, moves that align with a
broader trend where central banks now hold more gold than US
Treasuries.
BRICS member India has boosted its reserves by
518 tonnes in response to currency volatility and inflation concerns,
Turkey added 501 tonnes amid economic turbulence and lira devaluation,
and Poland and Kazakhstan each amassed hundreds of tonnes as part of
strategies to diversify their reserves, Visual Capitalist states.
Gulf
states like Qatar and Saudi Arabia are also increasing gold holdings.
The IMF doesn’t recognize silver as an official reserve asset, but that isn’t stopping central banks from purchasing the monetary/ industrial metal
Three central banks — Russia, India and Saudi Arabia —
have reportedly entered the silver market.
India’s foray into central bank silver buying is
due to its remonetisation of silver. As of April 2026, silver will
officially be allowed to serve as collateral for bank and non-bank
loans under new Reserve Bank of India regulations. The move, one
source says, effectively establishes a 10 to 1 silver-to-gold ratio in
collateral lending, marking the first time a major economy has
formally recognized silver’s role alongside gold in modern
banking.
The country reportedly bought 6,000 tonnes of silver in 2025, which accounts for 25% of annual silver supply. At today’s spot silver price of $78.84 an ounce, that works out to USD$16,686,012,960.
Investment interest increasing
Gold and silver’s monstrous gains in 2025 have, unsurprisingly, been noticed by retail and institutional investors.
The ING piece states that Q3 2025 marked a record-high for gold-backed exchange-traded-fund (ETF) inflows, with gold ETF investors adding 222 tonnes, coming close to the November 2020 all-time high.
In India, the largest consumer of silver, the price rocketed 180% year on year during Diwali, India’s harvest festival, as consumers pivoted from too-expensive gold to cheaper silver.
According to trade data cited by Indian business media, India’s
silver imports were expected to reach 5,500–6,000 tonnes in
2025, extending an already elevated trend from 2024.
Much
of this demand was investment-oriented, with retail participation
through silver ETFs remaining strong even after Diwali.
Based
on data from the Silver Institute and market tracking groups, global
investment demand for silver via ETFs and funds surged dramatically in
2025. By mid-year, 95 million ounces of silver had flowed into
ETFs globally, already surpassing total inflows for all of 2024. (Equiti.com)
Silver’s new industrial uses
Silver has a multitude of industrial applications. This includes solar
power, the automotive industry, brazing and soldering, 5G, and printed
and flexible electronics.
Solar
As the
metal with the highest electrical and thermal conductivity, silver is
ideally suited to solar panels. A Saxo Bank report stated that
“potential substitute metals cannot match silver in terms of
energy output per solar panel.”
Roughly 14% of
industrial silver demand now flows into photovoltaics (PV), a figure
that has tripled in less than a decade.
Using silver as
conductive ink, photovoltaic cells transform sunlight into
electricity. Silver paste within the solar cells ensures the electrons
move into storage or towards consumption, depending on the need.
For
every gigawatt of solar energy produced, 700,000 ounces of silver are
consumed, according to the Silver Academy. With global solar capacity additions projected to hit 467 GW in
2024—a 460% surge since 2015 — silver demand for
photovoltaics alone could exceed 232 million ounces in 2025.
New solar panels to use more silver, driving demand higher — Richar Mills
Electronics
Electronics accounts for roughly 30%
of industrial consumption, more than any other category. The
metal’s unmatched conductivity and resistance to corrosion make
it indispensable in applications ranging from power grids to
smartphones. (Guardian Gold, Silver Institute, World Silver Survey 2024/2025; Silver Institute industry overview)
The largest slice, nearly 70Moz annually, goes into
electrical contacts and switches. The second major slice, around 45
Moz, is consumed in high end solders and conductive pastes.
Around
30Moz flows into printed circuit boards and semiconductors. Finally,
about 20Moz goes into consumer electronics — smartphones,
tablets, laptops, wearables. Each device contains just milligrams of
silver, but when billions are produced annually, the numbers add up,
states Guardian Gold.
5G
5G technology is set to become another big new
driver of silver demand. Among the 5G components requiring silver, are
semiconductor chips, cabling, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS),
and Internet of things (IoT)-enabled devices.
The Silver
Institute expects silver demanded by 5G to more than double, from its
2022 ~7.5 million ounces, to around 16Moz by 2025 and as much as 23Moz
by 2030.
According to Shanghai Metal Market, 5G infrastructure deployment using silver in connection components
was expected to reach 13 million base stations globally by 2025.
Automotive
Another major industrial demand driver for silver is the
automotive industry. Silver is found in many car components throughout
vehicles’ electronic systems.
A Silver Institute report says battery electric vehicles contain up to twice as much silver as
ICE-powered vehicles — between 20 and 50 grams depending on the
model. Charging points and charging stations are also expected to
demand a lot more silver. It estimates the sector’s demand for
silver will rise to 88Moz in five years as the transition from
traditional cars and trucks to EVs accelerates. Others estimate that
by 2040, electric vehicles could demand nearly half of annual silver
supply.
Solid-state batteries
Citizen Watch Report (CWR) says solid state batteries are not only the future of electric
vehicles, but could change energy storage due to their superior
safety, energy density and longevity compared to lithium-ion
batteries.
For instance, Samsung’s solid-state
silver-carbon batteries promise a 600-mile range, 9-minute charging
and a 20-year lifespan.
Silver-zinc batteries offer higher energy density and safer operation,
making them ideal for medical devices and aerospace.
Solid-state
batteries replace the liquid or gel electrolyte with a solid one,
requiring silver for their construction. Each battery cell uses about
5 grams of silver, with a standard 100kWh battery pack potentially
needing up to 1 kg of silver.
According to CWR,
“estimates suggest that if just 20% of global car production
adopts this technology, the annual demand for silver could skyrocket
to 16,000 metric tons. This figure is significant when considered
against the backdrop of current global silver production, which hovers
around 25,000 metric tons annually, highlighting a potential silver
squeeze in the market.”
Robotics
The robotics market, growing at 23% annually, could also strain
silver supplies. The Silver Academy says “A typical $130,000
robot displacing 1.3 workers delivers a 65% IRR with a 1.5-year
payback. These machines rely on silver for wiring and sensors, with
AI-enhanced models driving demand further.”
AI
Data centers are growing rapidly in size and number, leading to a
significant increase in their consumption of energy, water and
minerals. This expansion is largely driven by the increasing demand
for Artificial Intelligence (AI), cloud computing and digital
services.
The physical infrastructure of data centers requires significant land and raw materials, including copper and silver, and rare earth elements for manufacturing chips. Server boards that connect the electrical components of a server and other intricate circuitry require minerals that efficiently conduct electricity and are resistant to corrosion — especially copper but also silver, gold, tin, tantalum, platinum and palladium.
Data centers are inherently energy-intensive, and their power consumption is projected to double globally by 2030, reaching around 945-980 terawatt-hours (TWh) annually. In some countries like the US, they could account for up to 12% of total electricity consumption by 2030, straining existing power grids. (AI Overview).
Data centers: gluttons for power water and minerals Part II — Richard Mills
Tech companies are plowing billions of dollars into data centers in
pursuit of revolutionary advances in artificial intelligence.
According to Data Center Knowledge, despite the limitations of solar power, in terms of its
intermittency, technology giants are racing to secure solar capacity.
It reports the following:
Microsoft has added more than 860 MW of new solar capacity in 2024
alone, with projects spanning Illinois, Texas, Michigan, and Missouri,
bringing its clean energy portfolio to more than 34 GW.
Meta
has similarly scaled its solar footprint in Texas, developing three
major projects totaling over 900 MW. Amazon leads all US companies in
solar development, with 13.6 GW of solar capacity in progress –
more than the total installed capacity of most states. This includes
over 20 projects in Texas.
Google is taking a hybrid
approach, combining solar energy and battery storage. The company
operates 312 MW of battery capacity and has entered a $20 billion
partnership with Intersect Power to develop co-located clean energy
and data center facilities.
Gold’s new industrial uses
Gold is obviously seen as less of an industrial metal than silver, but
new uses are coming to the fore. In particular, gold is finding
applications in AI-related technology.
Before we go there,
it should be noted that gold plays a crucial role in electronic
devices; like silver it is an excellent conductor of electricity, it
does not corrode, and its physical and chemical properties allow it to
be manipulated into extraordinarily thin wires and reliable coatings.
These properties make it an indispensable component of the computer
chips found in almost all electronic equipment. (The World Gold Council)
WGC notes that gold is an essential component in the
manufacturing of AI-enabled devices. AI systems rely heavily on
advanced hardware, including processors, memory chips and sensors, all
of which utilize gold. Gold’s superior conductivity ensures that
data can be processed and transmitted at high speed with minimal
energy loss. Furthermore, gold’s resistance to corrosion ensures
component longevity and durability – critical for continuous and
intensive AI applications.
Beyond AI, gold is used in medical devices such as implants, and gold nanoparticles are used in the medical diagnostics field; in aerospace, where gold is used in the production of critical components for satellites and spacecraft; and in clean technologies, where gold is an excellent chemical catalyst and a promising candidate material in the production of clean hydrogen and carbon dioxide transformation.
Geopolitics
A substantial amount of physical gold and silver buying as well as the
purchase of precious metal stocks has come from safe-haven demand
resulting from numerous areas of geopolitical tension.
Russia
has been pounding Ukraine’s energy infrastructure in recent
weeks, leaving thousands across the country without power or heating
amid freezing temperatures. Strikes on Kiev on Dec. 27 left more than
40% of residential buildings without heating, stated CNN.
An overnight Russian air attack killed at least two people in Ukraine’s capital.
Five days ago Russia
said a Ukrainian drone strike in a Russian-occupied village in the Kherson region killed 24
and wounded at least 50.
And despite some good news
Tuesday, in the form of a statement signed by Canada and Ukraine’s other allies to help
secure Ukraine from further Russian invasions if there is a peace deal —
the proposed security agreement would see a multinational force sent
to aid Ukraine after a ceasefire takes hold — the Ukraine
security conference in Paris was overshadowed by President
Trump’s recent capture and prosecution of the Venezuelan
president and his wife, and threats to annex Greenland.
“We do need Greenland, absolutely. We need it for
defense,” Trump told The Atlantic in an interview,
describing the island as reportedly “surrounded by Russian
and Chinese ships.”
One of Trump’s senior
advisors, Stephen Miller, refused to rule out the use of military
force to take control of the self-ruling Danish territory, which has
mineral and strategic significance.
Major European allies warned the United States on Tuesday that they would “not stop defending” the
values of sovereignty and territorial integrity should the US invade
the Arctic island.
Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette
Frederiksen said if Trump invades Greenland it will spell the end of NATO, which operates under the assumption that an attack on one NATO
member is an attack on all.
“But I will also make it
clear that if the U.S. chooses to attack another NATO country
militarily, then everything stops, including NATO and thus the
security that has been established since the end of the Second World
War,” Frederiksen added.
The dramatic seizure
of the Maduros is the most assertive action to achieve regime change
since the 2003 invasion of Iraq. While ostensibly done to indict
President Maduro on narco-terrorism charges, the Venezuelan government
for months has said that Trump and the US are seeking to take
Venezuela’s oil. The South American country is said to have the
world’s largest proven crude oil reserves of approximately 303
billion barrels, according to the US Energy Information
Association.
Last Saturday CBC News reported Trump saying he will allow “very large United States oil
companies” into Venezuela, who will spend the necessary billions
to “fix the badly broken infrastructure and start making money
for the country.”
There have been questions about the
legality of the US operation, which was done without congressional
approval.
Trump later told reporters on Air Force One that military action could soon be coming to Colombia and Mexico, adding that Cuba may fall on its own.
While China and
other foreign governments have criticized the US removal of Maduro,
there are now questions being asked whether the Trump
administration’s action could make it easier for President Xi
Jinping to make a move on Taiwan, CNBC reported on Monday.
The world is definitely becoming more
dangerous with Trump as the commander-in-chief, despite promising
voters that his “America First” doctrine would avoid
foreign entanglements.
Meanwhile in Iran, protests have
started in at least 17 of its 31 provinces, “presenting the
largest challenge to the country’s clerical establishment since
2022, a BBC Verify and BBC Persian analysis has found.”
Iranians are angry following a
sharp devaluation of the currency.
In the war-riddled part
of Africa containing the Democratic Republic of Congo and
Rwanda, DW reported “Violent fighting erupted on Saturday between
pro-Kinshasa forces and M23 rebels near Uvira, a key border
city connecting the DRC to Burundi, according to local sources.
“Kinshasa
says Rwanda-backed M23 rebels have killed 1,500 civilians despite a
US-brokered ceasefire, as fresh clashes erupt near Uvira and tensions
spill into Burundi.”
Finally, continuing conflict
between Thailand and Cambodia resulted in a Thai soldier being wounded
in a mortar attack in a disputed border region, Aljazeera reported, despite a ceasefire agreed to in late December.
Fighting last month killing dozens and displaced about one million on both sides.
US debt woes
A crisis is unfolding in the bond market that equity investors may not
be aware of. Long-term government bond yields are rising across major
economies as governments struggle to contain mounting debt burdens.
Japan’s
30-year bond yield currently sits at 3.4% compared to 2.2% a year ago.
Japan has long faced a mountainous debt problem. A 260% debt-to-GDP ratio is by far the highest among all major economies. (Reuters)
What happens in Japan reverberates beyond, given that Japan is the
largest holder of US Treasuries at about USD$1.2 trillion. If Japan
were to sell Treasuries en masse, it could impact the ability of the
United States to finance its ever-expanding spending, that is
increasing under the Trump administration.
Last May, a
$16-billion auction of 20-year bonds saw weak demand, forcing yields
higher. In fact, the Federal Reserve had to step in to buy up nearly
$2.2 billion of the $16 billion bond issue. Last Wednesday’s
bond purchase came after the Fed bought up more than $40 billion in
Treasuries.
The 30-year Treasury breached 5%, reflecting
concerns over rising deficits and long-term borrowing capacity.
As
a result, Moody’s downgraded its US debt rating from the top-level Aaa to Aa1. As investor confidence in US
debt declines, borrowing costs could rise (higher yields are needed to
attract investors to what are now considered riskier assets),
increasing the interest burden on the US government. As yields go up,
the US government must spend more of its revenues just to keep up with
interest payments.
Asia Times recently reported the US reached a dubious milestone: trillion-dollar interest
payments on runaway US government debt.
According to the
nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Budget, this is the “new
norm” as the US national debt approaches $39 trillion.
As
the Trump administration auctions off more Treasury bonds to pay for
this increasing shortfall, the question is who will buy them? Or in
Asia Times’ words, “why would officials in Tokyo and
Beijing, in their right minds, increase their exposure to the US
economy at such a precarious moment?”
Similar
concerns were expressed by a panel of economic luminaries quoted by Bloomberg, who said “the long-run risk posed by mounting federal debt
represented a paramount problem facing the US economy.”
The
Congressional Budget Office confirms the Asia Times’ federal
deficit figure, stating that this year it will reach $1.9 trillion,
bringing total debt to about 100% of gross domestic product.
That’s seen rising to about 118% of GDP in the next decade.
Dollar destruction
If the government can’t find enough foreign buyers to sop up its
debt, the Fed will have to step in and buy Treasuries, much the same
as it did during the quantitative easing that accompanied the
financial crisis and the covid-19 pandemic. This, of course, is highly
inflationary.
Inflation not only raises consumer and
producer prices, it devalues the currency, i.e., the US dollar.
In
a recent article we discussed the BRICS move away from the dollar
through the formation of a gold-backed currency, the Unit.
BRICS launch gold-backed currency — Richard Mills
The BRICS countries are moving away from the US dollar as the currency
that settles international transactions, and gold is an integral part
of the new settlement mechanism.
On Oct. 31, 2025,
researchers launched a pilot to test a gold-anchored settlement
“Unit” inside the 10-member BRICS+ bloc of countries,
which includes Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt,
Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates.
This
was followed by a Unit prototype launched on Dec. 8.
The
Unit is a “digital trade currency” pilot created for
settlement between BRICS economies. The initiative came from IRIAS,
the International Research Institute for Advanced Systems.
Importantly,
the Unit does not replace national currencies. Rather, it aims to act
as a neutral settlement tool that reduces reliance on the US dollar in
trade between BRICS economies.
According to CCN:
The BRICS Unit is a gold-anchored digital trade currency
designed for cross-border settlement.
Its launch coincides
with record public anxiety about dollar debasement, as shown in Google
Trends data shared by Bloomberg.
The prototype uses a 40%
gold and 60% BRICS-currency basket that adjusts daily.
The
pilot signals a structural move toward de-dollarization and
strengthens long-term global demand for gold.
The tweet below shows how far the dollar has been devalued since the Fed was
created in 1913. That year, one US dollar bought 30 Hershey’s
chocolate bars.
Another means of evaluating the strength of the dollar is to see
what percentage of central banks exchange reserves are in dollars.
Wolf Street recently reported that in Q3 2025, the share of USD-denominated assets held by
other central banks than the US dropped to 56.9% of total foreign
exchange reserves — the lowest since 1994.
Remember, central banks now own more gold than US Treasuries.
The
data came via the IMF’s Currency Composition of Official Foreign
Exchange Reserves.
But Wolf Street makes an important
point.
It’s not that central banks are dumping
dollars; rather, they are still adding to their dollar holdings,
it’s just that they are adding more of other currencies, and
gold.
“Particularly”, says Wolf Richter,
“a gaggle of smaller currencies whose combined share has surged,
while central banks’ holdings of USD-denominated assets
haven’t changed much for a decade, and so the percentage share
of those USD assets continued to decline.”
Commentators
mostly talk about the dollar, interest rates, and bond yields in the
context of gold, but Tavi Costa, former partner at Crescat Capital,
recently chose to comment on silver — although the chart he posts shows how the price of gold
spiked during the hyperinflationary years of Germany’s Weimar
Republic.
While not suggesting that the two time periods,
now and Weimar Germany, are similar, he does see a resemblance from a
price-performance standpoint. While US inflation was
“sticky” throughout 2025, never falling below 2.3%, silver
gained 147%.
Costa suggests that among all the reasons for silver rising, a
depreciating currency is paramount:
“There have been
no major discoveries, no meaningful supply response, while demand
continues to rise structurally, all while a monetary crisis quietly
builds. This is the kind of price behavior typically observed in
emerging markets when confidence in the currency is eroding.”
Conclusion
Given all that has been discussed in this article, it should be clear that I believe the bull market for gold and silver is not over.
Among the demand drivers for both are geopolitical hot spots like
Venezuela, central bank purchases, increased investor interest,
inflation, lower interest rates, a continuing low dollar, and new
industrial uses for gold and silver, particularly around
electrification and AI.
With a lack of new discoveries and
ore grades falling, the supply of gold and silver is failing to meet
the demand, without recycling.
As for how long the momentum
could last, Kitco cites one commentator, veteran precious metals executive Robert
Gottlieb, who argues there is a structural shift going on that is not
temporary: “This is people waking up to hard assets as a
necessity.”
That brings up a frequently asked
question: In a precious metals bull market, is it better to own
physical gold/silver, or PM mining stocks?
I’ve
always maintained that mining stocks, particularly juniors, offer the
best leverage to rising commodity prices, and apparently, I’m
not alone.
Another Kitco article cites Chris Mancini, co-portfolio manager of the Gabelli Gold
Fund (GOLDX), who says that “the conditions that have driven
gold prices to record highs above $4,400 an ounce remain firmly in
place, supporting higher prices and robust earnings.
“He
said he expects U.S. interest rates to trend lower this year,
regardless of who leads the Federal Reserve, while economic momentum
softens. At the same time, central bank demand—particularly from
China—remains a structural feature of the market.
“That
backdrop, he says, is now translating directly into margin expansion
for producers.”
But it’s not only the producers
who have gained and are set to do even better in 2026.
Respected
precious metals analyst Adam Hamilton observed that, after slumping badly a year ago, 2025 was the year that
PM mining stocks finally caught up with soaring gold and silver
prices. Hamilton references the huge gains in gold miner and junior
gold miner ETFs GDX and GDXJ, and notes that silver bested even Nvidia
in 2025.
After years of being starved of capital, funding
finally returned to junior mining in 2025, meaning a lot of companies
executed drilling and exploration programs whose results are still
trickling in.
Major miners still occasionally make
discoveries, but usually it’s in partnership with juniors.
Juniors almost always find the early-stage, high-potential targets
that will become the next mines.
The mining industry is on the hunt — Richard Mills
Richard (Rick) Mills
aheadoftheherd.com
Subscribe to AOTH's free newsletter
Legal Notice / Disclaimer
Ahead of the Herd newsletter, aheadoftheherd.com, hereafter known as
AOTH.
Please read the
entire Disclaimer
carefully before you use this website or read the newsletter. If you
do not agree to all the AOTH/Richard Mills Disclaimer, do not
access/read this website/newsletter/article, or any of its pages. By
reading/using this AOTH/Richard Mills website/newsletter/article, and
whether you actually read this Disclaimer, you are deemed to have
accepted it.
More: Legal Notice / Disclaimer
Ahead of the Herd newsletter, aheadoftheherd.com, hereafter known as AOTH.
Please read the entire Disclaimer carefully before you use this website or read the newsletter. If you do not agree to all the AOTH/Richard Mills Disclaimer, do not access/read this website/newsletter/article, or any of its pages. By reading/using this AOTH/Richard Mills website/newsletter/article, and whether you actually read this Disclaimer, you are deemed to have accepted it.
Any AOTH/Richard Mills document is not, and should not be, construed as an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to purchase or subscribe for any investment.
AOTH/Richard Mills has based this document on information obtained from sources he believes to be reliable, but which has not been independently verified.
AOTH/Richard Mills makes no guarantee, representation or warranty and accepts no responsibility or liability as to its accuracy or completeness.
Expressions of opinion are those of AOTH/Richard Mills only and are subject to change without notice.
AOTH/Richard Mills assumes no warranty, liability or guarantee for the current relevance, correctness or completeness of any information provided within this Report and will not be held liable for the consequence of reliance upon any opinion or statement contained herein or any omission.
Furthermore, AOTH/Richard Mills assumes no liability for any direct or indirect loss or damage for lost profit, which you may incur as a result of the use and existence of the information provided within this AOTH/Richard Mills Report.
You agree that by reading AOTH/Richard Mills articles, you are acting at your OWN RISK. In no event should AOTH/Richard Mills liable for any direct or indirect trading losses caused by any information contained in AOTH/Richard Mills articles. Information in AOTH/Richard Mills articles is not an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any security. AOTH/Richard Mills is not suggesting the transacting of any financial instruments.
Our publications are not a recommendation to buy or sell a security - no information posted on this site is to be considered investment advice or a recommendation to do anything involving finance or money aside from performing your own due diligence and consulting with your personal registered broker/financial advisor. AOTH/Richard Mills recommends that before investing in any securities, you consult with a professional financial planner or advisor, and that you should conduct a complete and independent investigation before investing in any security after prudent consideration of all pertinent risks. Ahead of the Herd is not a registered broker, dealer, analyst, or advisor. We hold no investment licenses and may not sell, offer to sell, or offer to buy any security.
Research mining stocks at Investorideas.com with our free mining stocks directory at Investorideas.com
Check out the Exploring Mining podcast at Investorideas.com with host Cali Van Zant for the latest mining stock news and insightful interviews with top industry experts
Latest episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YRNGJcKykJQ
About Investorideas.com - Big Investing Ideas
Investorideas.com is the go-to platform for big investing ideas. From breaking stock news to top- rated investing podcasts, we cover it all. Our original branded content includes podcasts such as Exploring Mining, Cleantech, Crypto Corner, Cannabis News, and the AI Eye. We also create free investor stock directories for sectors including mining, crypto, renewable energy, gaming, biotech, tech, sports and more. Public companies within the sectors we cover can use our news publishing and content creation services to help tell their story to interested investors. Paid content is always disclosed.
Learn more about our news, PR and social media, podcast and ticker tag services at Investorideas.com
https://www.investorideas.com/Investors/Services.asp
Learn more about digital advertising and guest posts at Investorideas
https://www.investorideas.com/Advertise/
Follow us on X @investorideas @stocknewsbites
Follow us on
Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/Investorideas
Follow us on YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/c/Investorideas
Sign up for free stock news alerts at Investorideas.com:
https://www.investorideas.com/Resources/Newsletter.asp
Contact Investorideas.com
800 665 0411
