When the world’s largest asset manager and the ‘bond king’ both agree — run to gold, silver and bitcoin

Published 1 month ago Positive
When the world’s largest asset manager and the ‘bond king’ both agree — run to gold, silver and bitcoin
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I’ve been telling MarketWatch readers to buy gold, silver and bitcoin for months now. Call it pattern recognition. Thirty years of watching markets taught me to spot the con before the mark realizes they’re at the table.

Then BlackRock pitched the same strategy after last week’s Federal Reserve rate cut. When BlackRock BLK starts sounding like me, it’s like the pope buying a casino. The house always wins, but now it’s blessed.

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BlackRock wasn’t alone. Last week, something interesting happened on CNBC. Host Scott Wapner was interviewing Jeffrey Gundlach — they call him the Bond King. Wapner lobbed him a softball about portfolio allocation. The “perfect portfolio,” he called it. (Watch video starting at 20:45)

Gundlach could’ve given the standard answer. He didn’t.

“Twenty-five percent in gold isn’t excessive,” he said from his DoubleLine office, where they manage $95 billion in bonds.

Wapner actually stuttered: “Really? One quarter of one’s portfolio in gold GC00?”

“Yeah,” Gundlach said. Then he called it insurance and predicted $4,000 by year-end. When the dealer starts betting against his own game, smart players head for the exit.

They’ve finally noticed what I’ve been watching for years. Your savings account is bleeding out at 4% a year. You can’t see the wound — it’s hidden behind a 3% interest payment. But you’re getting poorer every day you hold dollars.

Congratulations. You’ve discovered financial repression.

Financial repression is when the government needs to make its $37 trillion debt disappear without actually paying it back.

They can’t raise taxes; you’d vote them out. They can’t cut spending; someone else would vote them out. So they do something sneakier: They make sure your savings earn less than inflation, then pocket the difference.

Your $10,000 becomes worth $9,300 in purchasing power while they pretend to pay you “interest.” It’s like a mob protection racket, except the mob has better rates.

Let me walk you through the actual math. Nobody in Washington wants you doing this calculation. They’d rather you scroll TikTok while they pick your pocket.

You buy a $10,000 Treasury bond paying 3% interest. That’s $300 a year — what a Congress member spends on lunch. The IRS takes $75 immediately. No negotiation. No shame. They tax you for lending them money, which is like a burglar charging you for the crowbar he used on your window. You’re left with $225.

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Here’s the part that should make you angry: As I explained in my recent column, inflation is not just the CPI print. It’s monetary dilution. The U.S. money supply has grown at 7% annually for decades. Seven percent. Every year. Like clockwork. Your $10,000 just lost $700 in real purchasing power while politicians told you everything’s fine.

Do the math: You’re down $475.

Not up. Down. For lending money to the same government that runs the DMV. You want to know what this is? It’s a con game where the dealer owns the casino, writes the rules and prints the chips. And you? You’re sitting at the table thinking you’re an investor.

You’re not. You’re the mark.

This worked great from 1942 to 1951. The government kept interest rates at 2.5% while inflation ran at 5.5% — and bondholders lost 30% of their purchasing power. But hey, we won World War II. Fair trade. This time, we’re just paying off 40 years of spending like a drunken sailor — except that’s an insult to drunken sailors who at least spend their own money.

And now they’re setting up for the second round. New Fed governor Stephen Miran recently told Congress about the Fed’s “third mandate” to maintain “moderate long-term interest rates” — code for yield curve control. Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that stablecoins could grow to $3.7 trillion by decade’s end, creating massive Treasury demand.

The digital dollar trap

But here’s where it gets interesting, and by interesting, I mean terrifying.

Some clever folks in the digital currency business just figured out how to make financial repression work even better.

There’s this thing called a stablecoin. It’s basically a digital dollar that’s supposed to be always worth exactly one dollar. Think of it as cryptocurrency for people who hate the crypto part. The biggest stablecoin company, called Tether USDTUSD, makes these digital dollars and backs them with real assets. They’ve got 170 billion of them floating around the world right now.

Still with me? Good. Because here comes the con.

Tether just announced they’re launching a special U.S. dollar-backed coin called USA₮. Yes, they trademarked the dollar sign, because apparently regular dollars weren’t pretentious enough.

This new digital dollar will follow rules written by something called the GENIUS Act.

And here’s where it gets beautiful, in that train-wreck sort of way.

The chief executive of this new digital dollar company? Bo Hines. Until August, he was Trump’s crypto adviser, helping write these exact laws. One month later, he’s profiting from them. In Washington, that’s actually considered a cooling-off period. The rest of us have other names for it.

These rules say every USA₮ must be backed by U.S. Treasury bills. Let me translate: By law, anyone who wants to use these digital dollars is forced to lend money to the government at whatever pathetic rate Washington offers.

It’s like passing a law that says every American must eat at McDonald’s three times a week. McDonald’s doesn’t need to make better burgers or offer competitive prices. They’ve got guaranteed customers. Except in this case, you’re McDonald’s, and you’re being force-fed Treasury bills that pay 3% while the money supply expands 7%.

Read:Why banks are afraid you’re going to ditch them for stablecoins

Follow the gold

Here’s the beautiful part. While Tether is building this machine to force people into Treasury bills, guess what they’re doing with their own money? They’re buying gold. $8.7 billion worth, sitting in Swiss vaults. They’re buying gold-mining companies. They made $13 billion in profit last year and they’re converting it to hard assets as fast as they can.

The market’s already caught on. Gold is up more than 40% this year. Silver SI00 hit 14-year highs. Central banks are buying gold like it’s 1999, except instead of Y2K, they’re preparing for D-Day: Debasement Day.

This isn’t fringe behavior anymore. BlackRock manages $10 trillion. Gundlach built his reputation betting on bonds when bonds were the only game in town. These aren’t gold bug podcasters or silver-stacking survivalists. These are the people your financial adviser name drops to sound sophisticated.

Yet they’re all making the same move: Out of paper, into real assets. When the house starts betting against its own game, smart players don’t ask questions; they follow the money.

The investment playbook

History shows that during financial repression, only hard assets protect wealth. From 1942-1951, bondholders got fleeced while real assets preserved value. Americans couldn’t even own gold then — it was illegal until 1974. This time, we have three legal escape routes:

Gold is the classic play. At close to $3,800 an ounce, it’s not cheap. But neither is insurance when your house is on fire. Central banks are hoarding it. Tether is hoarding it. When everyone who knows how the game works is buying the same thing, maybe you should too.

Silver at $44 an ounce is gold for people who don’t have gold money. The gold-to-silver ratio is 86:1, way above the historical 16:1 average. Plus, they actually use silver for things like solar panels, EVs and electronics. It’s got a floor and a rocket booster.

Bitcoin BTCUSD is digital gold for people who think physical gold is too 20th century. It can’t be confiscated, controlled or inflated away. Even Tether keeps about 5.5% of its reserves in bitcoin. If financial repression turns into monetary chaos (and when has a monetary reset ever gone smoothly?), bitcoin is your ejection seat.

Read: What Trump’s bitcoin binge really says to Americans about their money

What to do with your money now

Put 10% in gold and silver, 10% in bitcoin. Get completely out of long-term bonds. If you want leverage, add gold-mining stocks.

USA₮ launches in weeks. The architecture of financial repression is being built while you’re reading this. Washington is betting you’ll keep buying bonds because that’s what good citizens do. They know you’d rather go broke slowly with Treasury bonds than get rich buying what the gold bugs, silver stackers, and bitcoin bros are buying.

They know you’d rather lose money in a way that sounds good at the country club than make money in a way that sounds like you’ve been listening to podcasts. The beautiful irony? The paranoid preppers will be eating steak while the naysayers will be debating yield curves over spaghetti.

He holds positions in gold, silver and bitcoin.

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Your letter may be published anonymously in this Friday’s “Dear Charlie” reader mailbag.

Also read:And now for Washington’s next trick — sawing the dollar’s value in half

More: You’re just getting scraps from the stock market. Here’s where the big money is made.

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