The New Monetary Order Has a Price. It's Gold.
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The New Monetary Order Has a Price. It's Gold.
Dear investor.
Something has shifted. Not this week. Not this month. But the evidence is now impossible to ignore. The United States carries $39 trillion in national debt. Net interest payments on that debt will surpass $1 trillion this year for the first time in history. The Federal Reserve, caught between stubborn inflation and a weakening labor market, has no comfortable move. And the man expected to lead it next, Kevin Warsh, introduces a new layer of uncertainty that markets are still pricing in.
Gold is trading near $4,789 per ounce. Silver close to $79. These are not crisis prices. They are transition prices. The world is quietly moving from an era of dollar dominance to what analysts are now calling a New Monetary Order, one where gold settles trade imbalances, anchors reserves, and protects wealth at the sovereign level.
The BRICS bloc is settling transactions in gold. Central banks are projected to purchase up to 900 tonnes this year alone. China added 25 tonnes in February. The Bank of France sold its U.S. gold reserves and immediately repurchased them in Europe, locking in a $15 billion profit in the process. These are not speculative moves. These are institutional convictions. The investor who waits for confirmation will find the price has already moved.
IMG is here to help you act before the next chapter is written. Reach out to our team and take your position today.
Much success to all.
Disclaimer.
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