WARNING: If You Hold Gold or Silver, Watch This Before It’s Too Late | Innecco & Chambers
Автор: The Bullion Talks
Загружено: 2025-11-20
Просмотров: 59
If global markets are truly standing on the edge of a historic turning point, then the forces driving gold upward may have far deeper roots than inflation, interest rates, or central bank policy. In a recent discussion between Clem Chambers, founder and former CEO of ADVFN, and Mario Innecco, a Financial Markets and Macroeconomics Analyst, the two experts explored a thesis that challenges conventional economic thinking: gold rises not simply on financial instability—but on geopolitical stress, strategic risk, and the shadow of war.
Their conversation reveals a broader pattern woven through history. Whenever nations sense instability, they do not accumulate paper assets or digital promises. They accumulate gold. This observation, Chambers argues, has been true from medieval kings financing military campaigns to modern governments preparing for conflict or global disruption. Gold, in this view, is not merely a hedge; it is a strategic asset.Chambers explained that he is “up to his ears in gold,” not due to leverage, but due to anticipation—waiting for the US government to “oil its printing press” once again. He expects a period of sideways trading before another leg upward, potentially toward the $5,000 level. His reasoning extends beyond monetary policy. The more global stress intensifies, he argues, the more countries feel compelled to build strategic reserves. And in geopolitically charged times, gold becomes the currency of state-level survival.
Innecco and Chambers both pointed to current global tensions—Israel and Iran, China and the US, border pressures in South Asia, and the enduring conflict in Ukraine. While many confrontations remain contained, the pattern is unmistakable: a rise in global stress is matched by rising gold prices. Chambers suggests that even hypothetical nations—like his imagined “Mario Land”—would logically be accumulating gold to prepare for unpredictable geopolitical outcomes.
From an economic standpoint, the relationship between gold and inflation is more complex than often assumed. Chambers challenged the notion that inflation alone drives gold upward, noting that historical records show limited correlation. Japan provides an example: gold in Japanese yen rose dramatically from 60,000 after the 2008 crisis to over 620,000 today, despite Japan remaining free of direct warfare. Innecco noted that Japan needed to debase its currency, not support war efforts, demonstrating that monetary strategy is itself a reason for gold’s strength.
Credits: maneco64
Gold Is the Currency of Global Conflict and That's Why It's Going Up | Clem Chambers.
• Gold Is the Currency of Global Conflict an...
The information provided in this video is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Always consult with a qualified and licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
This video features AI-generated narration for presentation purposes.
This content may include forward-looking statements that go beyond historical facts. These may cover expectations or projections regarding topics such as the future prices of Bitcoin, gold, and silver; U.S. debt levels; currency trends; cryptocurrency adoption; money supply changes; inflation forecasts; energy demand; mining stock performance; and other potential market developments.
Please be aware that such statements are speculative in nature, based on assumptions that may not hold true, and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ significantly from those discussed.
#Gold #GoldForecast #RandySmallwood #EconomicInsights #WealthProtection #clemchambers #marioinnecco
Доступные форматы для скачивания:
Скачать видео mp4
-
Информация по загрузке: