Outside The Dollar

Gold at $8,000? What Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs See Coming

13 min · 28. touko 2026
jakson Gold at $8,000? What Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs See Coming kansikuva

Kuvaus

Central banks are buying gold at a pace of roughly 60 tons per month through 2026, a structural shift that carries implications for individual investors thinking about long-term purchasing power. Elena examines why institutional players, from BRICS central banks to Goldman Sachs analysts, are focused on gold and silver simultaneously in May 2026, tracing the dollar's declining share of global reserves from 72 percent in 2001 to 58 percent in 2024. The episode breaks down Deutsche Bank's $8,000 per ounce scenario for 2031, explains what reserve diversification means in plain terms, and addresses silver's recent pullback alongside the mechanics and tax pitfalls of a Gold IRA rollover. The core question running through every segment is whether the same structural logic driving central bank precious metals demand applies to individual savers protecting long-term purchasing power. Data and context draw from Lear Capital research, Goldman Sachs demand forecasts, and a NY Post guide to Gold IRA rollovers. For Lear Capital's latest research on gold and silver, visit learcapital.com or call 800-576-9355 to speak with a specialist.

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity Outside The Dollar-yhteisöön!

Aloita maksutta

14 vrk ilmainen kokeilu

Kokeilun jälkeen 7,99 € / kuukausi. · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

10 jaksot

jakson Gold at $6,000: What the Forecast Really Means kansikuva

Gold at $6,000: What the Forecast Really Means

Bank of America reset its 12-month gold price target to $6,000 per ounce in June 2026, citing Fed leadership uncertainty, persistent fiscal deficits, and structurally low investor allocations. Elena Reyes stress-tests that forecast alongside Goldman Sachs data showing central banks purchased 59 tonnes of gold in April, with China accounting for roughly 24 tonnes, framing institutional buying behavior as a signal about purchasing power exposure rather than price speculation. She examines the macro relationship between dollar erosion and precious metals, walks through Peter Schiff's case for buying the recent $68 pullback, and analyzes a Lear Capital consumer survey finding that 69 percent of respondents ranked company reputation above price when evaluating a precious metals dealer. The episode draws on Bank of America research, Goldman Sachs central bank data, and an Advisor Perspectives framing of gold as a tool for measuring dollar debasement.

26. kesä 202613 min
jakson Inflation Stays High: What Gold and Silver Signals Say Now kansikuva

Inflation Stays High: What Gold and Silver Signals Say Now

Central banks are accelerating gold accumulation at a pace not seen in recent years, and the June 2026 economic data makes that institutional behavior harder to dismiss. Elena Reyes examines three converging signals — inflation reaching 4.2%, the Federal Reserve holding rates steady, and rising gold demand among sovereign institutions — explaining what each means for investors holding or considering precious metals. She breaks down why a Fed hold at elevated inflation is not a neutral outcome for households, why small-business hiring data is a more honest recession signal than headline unemployment, and why Barclays and Societe Generale are both repositioning around commodities. The episode draws directly from the World Gold Council's 2026 central bank survey, which found that 93% of respondents hold gold and 45% plan to increase their precious metals holdings.

19. kesä 202612 min
jakson U.S. Debt: 100% of GDP and the Case for Gold & Silver kansikuva

U.S. Debt: 100% of GDP and the Case for Gold & Silver

High U.S. debt levels near 100% of GDP are reshaping inflation, interest costs, and how investors think about gold and silver as portfolio hedges. Elena talks with John Ohanesian about why the current debt and deficit path in June 2026 looks different from the post–World War II period, and how structural spending, rising rates, and de-dollarization pressures can affect everyday Americans. They explore what mounting federal obligations may mean for taxes, government spending choices, dollar confidence, and long-term purchasing power, and why more investors and family offices are allocating to precious metals as diversification tools. The conversation also covers the dual monetary and industrial role of silver, supply deficits, and how critical mineral designations and geopolitical tension are influencing demand. The episode references a UBS survey of wealthy families on dollar exposure, World Gold Council commentary, and price projections from Deutsche Bank and Bank of America.

15. kesä 202616 min
jakson Gold Tops Treasuries: What Debt and Inflation Mean for Your Savings kansikuva

Gold Tops Treasuries: What Debt and Inflation Mean for Your Savings

For the first time in thirty years, gold has surpassed U.S. Treasuries as the world's largest reserve asset — a shift that carries real implications for individual investors in June 2026. Elena Reyes examines what is driving central bank gold accumulation, how eroding real incomes are squeezing household purchasing power, and why the structural trajectory of U.S. federal debt matters to anyone holding or considering precious metals. She explains the difference between short-term geopolitical noise and deeper systemic forces, and addresses what physical gold and silver actually offer a portfolio — including the honest caveat that gold dropped in 2022 even as inflation peaked. The episode draws on data from Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan, and Federal Reserve PCE reporting to ground each argument in specific evidence rather than speculation. To learn more, visit learcapital.com or call 800-576-9355 to speak with a specialist.

5. kesä 20268 min
jakson Gold at $8,000? What Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs See Coming kansikuva

Gold at $8,000? What Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs See Coming

Central banks are buying gold at a pace of roughly 60 tons per month through 2026, a structural shift that carries implications for individual investors thinking about long-term purchasing power. Elena examines why institutional players, from BRICS central banks to Goldman Sachs analysts, are focused on gold and silver simultaneously in May 2026, tracing the dollar's declining share of global reserves from 72 percent in 2001 to 58 percent in 2024. The episode breaks down Deutsche Bank's $8,000 per ounce scenario for 2031, explains what reserve diversification means in plain terms, and addresses silver's recent pullback alongside the mechanics and tax pitfalls of a Gold IRA rollover. The core question running through every segment is whether the same structural logic driving central bank precious metals demand applies to individual savers protecting long-term purchasing power. Data and context draw from Lear Capital research, Goldman Sachs demand forecasts, and a NY Post guide to Gold IRA rollovers. For Lear Capital's latest research on gold and silver, visit learcapital.com or call 800-576-9355 to speak with a specialist.

28. touko 202613 min