Outside The Dollar

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

13 min · 28 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Gold at $8,000? What Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs See Coming

Descripción

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.

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5 episodios

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

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.

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