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Enhancing the Chinese economy may have long-term consequences for us. It is crucial to minimize our investment and gradually reduce our dependence on Chinese trade. However, finding the right approach to achieve this is challenging.

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Professor Sachs believes Trump's tariffs are pure protectionism based on flawed reasoning, not a negotiating tactic. Trump wrongly sees trade deficits as unfairness, when they reflect America's overspending due to large budget deficits. Sachs attributes this situation to a corrupted political system and the president's overreach of emergency powers. He notes the policies are destabilizing, against American business interests, and potentially illegal. Sachs suggests the world should move forward on open trade without the U.S. to avoid a domino effect of protectionism reminiscent of the 1930s. He hopes Europe and China can negotiate trade shifts. Sachs notes the dollar is weakening, signaling declining confidence in the U.S. economy and leadership. He argues the dollar's preeminence will decline due to the rise of other nations, technological advancements, and the weaponization of the dollar through sanctions, pushing BRICS countries towards non-dollar settlements. China is trying to stabilize the international system but recognizes the U.S. system is hostile. China is gradually internationalizing the renminbi, developing non-dollar payments, and diversifying its foreign exchange reserves. Sachs concludes that the U.S. is overplaying its hand with a delusional view of American power, leading to a dangerous period.

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The US dollar is the bedrock of the world's financial system, and a rapidly rising dollar can destabilize financial markets. Despite the US printing many dollars, global demand is so high that the supply isn't enough, preventing rising US inflation. The risk comes when other economies slow down relative to the US. With less economic activity, fewer dollars circulate globally, increasing the price as countries chase them to pay for goods and service debts. This creates a "dollar milkshake" effect, forcing countries to devalue their currencies as the dollar rises. The US becomes a safe haven, sucking in capital and further increasing the dollar's value, potentially leading to a sovereign bond and currency crisis. Central banks may try to intervene, but the momentum can become unstoppable. The world is stuck with the dollar underpinning the global financial system, so everyone needs to pay attention to the dollar milkshake theory.

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Secretary of State Marco Rubio traveled to Germany for the Munich Security Conference and delivered what the speakers describe as “the most important American speech in the last thirty years,” calling on Europe to join Trump’s new world order or face consequences. He told NATO allies that “playtime is over right now,” that a new world order is being written by the United States, and that “you’re either with us or you’re against us.” He previewed the speech on the tarmac, then argued that the West must thrive again and that European leaders are “total losers” managing Europe’s decline, particularly in Germany. He framed NATO as a transaction: “NATO is a transaction between countries, that NATO is only worth supporting if you are worth defending,” and claimed Europe is “declining fast under stupid policies,” making NATO a questionable expense. Rubio criticized a liberal globalist, borderless agenda of mass immigration and sovereignty transfers to Brussels, calling the transformation of the economy foolish and voluntary, leaving the U.S. dependent on others and vulnerable to crisis. The discussion notes that Rubio’s rhetoric is not subtle, stating that “the rules that govern the world are dead” and the old order has ended, with these conversations already ongoing with allies and world leaders behind closed doors. The segment connects Rubio’s speech to broader strategic implications: the United States wants Europe “with us,” but is prepared to rebuild the global order alone if necessary. The commentary emphasizes a leverage play: pick a side—join the U.S. or face consequences—and links this to economic policy and currency strategy. On economic and currency policy, the program asserts that the dollar’s reserve status and the old world order are being challenged. Trump’s team reportedly signals that a strong dollar is no longer the default; a weaker dollar would help U.S. exports and reshoring, mirroring a Chinese approach that kept the yuan cheap for decades to build export power. The segment cites Reuters that China’s treasury holdings have fallen to their lowest level since 2008 as banks are urged to curb exposure to U.S. Treasuries, with pressure to bring holdings home to fund their own needs. China is also tightening rare earth export controls, aiming to influence the “factory floor.” The discussion suggests a currency war with a weaker dollar in the U.S. plan and a stronger yuan as China seeks global reserve status, while Europe is squeezed in the middle, invited to align with the U.S. or step aside. The synthesis notes a GOP intra-party knife fight: Rubio aligns with neocon perspectives; JD Vance is viewed as problematic for expansion of military conflicts, potentially contrasting with a no-war stance. The overall takeaway is that Rubio’s Munich speech is framed as a signal flare indicating the West’s reorganization and the dollar’s vulnerability. Sponsor segment: The host discusses critical minerals and North American independence, highlighting Project Vault, a $12 billion strategic mineral reserve designed to shield the private sector from supply shocks in essential minerals. At a Critical Minerals Ministerial, JD Vance and Marco Rubio delivered a message to China that the U.S. will no longer allow market flooding to kill domestic projects. The segment focuses on niobium, a rare earth mineral with no domestic US production, currently sourced abroad, and vital for space and defense applications. North American Niobium (ticker NIOMF) is exploring in Quebec, with drilling permits planned; the company also targets neodymium and praseodymium magnets. The leadership includes Joseph Carrabas, former Rio Tinto and Cliffs Natural Resources figures, and Carrie Lynn Findlay, a former Canadian cabinet minister. The sponsor emphasizes the strategic importance of niobium and rare earths for U.S. security and manufacturing resilience.

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Peter Schiff argues that the economic crisis ahead will be much bigger than 2008 and will center on a dollar and sovereign debt crisis. He says gold’s rise to and beyond $5,000 (and his longer-term view that it will go much higher) signals that the problems that previously led him to forecast $5,000 gold are now much larger. The core issue, he says, is not just a mortgage crisis but a loss of confidence in the United States’ ability to repay its debt and manage deficits and inflation. He contends that the problems were delayed for over a decade by policy “kicking the can down the road,” but have grown more severe, making the coming crisis broader and more damaging. On the dollar and U.S. debt, Schiff contends that the world is moving away from the U.S. dollar as a reserve currency. He notes foreign central banks are buyers of dollars, but argues the United States has alienated many nations and created incentives for diversification away from the dollar. He predicts gold will become the primary reserve asset for foreign central banks to replace U.S. treasuries. He emphasizes that the U.S. economy relies on the world supplying goods and saving money, and without that external support, the U.S. economy would not function as it currently does. Regarding housing and wealth creation, Schiff dismisses the idea that housing-price gains create true wealth if buyers cannot afford to purchase at inflated prices. He accuses former President Trump of aiming to sustain or enlarge a housing bubble through inflation, noting that the only way to keep home prices from falling would be higher inflation. He distinguishes between genuine wealth and artificial price levels created by monetary policy. Inflation is presented as a consequence of expanding money supply and credit. Schiff points to the dollar’s four-year low and a record low against the Swiss franc as signs that the dollar will depreciate further, leading to higher consumer prices in the U.S. He expects a protracted downturn accompanied by high inflation and higher interest rates, with the dollar at the epicenter of the crisis. On timing, Schiff believes the crisis will unfold differently from 2008 because the U.S. government cannot bail itself out in the same way. He foresees a dollar crisis that benefits other nations through a realignment of purchasing power: as the dollar weakens, prices rise in the U.S. while goods become relatively cheaper elsewhere. He foresees increased demand for gold and possibly other currencies as the dollar declines, with central banks more inclined to hold gold. Regarding policy distortions, Schiff argues that current fiscal and monetary policies distort markets beyond Keynesian ideals, with deficits seen as perpetual. He critiques GDP as an imperfect measure, noting that it includes expenditures many would rather avoid, such as disaster-related spending, health care costs, and crime prevention expenses, and excludes beneficial aspects like leisure time. On the political economy, he suggests that the U.S. debt problem will worsen as long as there is no political will to cut spending, predicting creditors will increasingly stop funding the U.S. debt. He cites Japan as a potential large seller of Treasuries, which would push interest rates higher. He says that if the dollar falls, Americans will lose purchasing power while the rest of the world gains access to cheaper goods, and global investment will shift away from the U.S. In summary, Schiff foresees a coming, substantial dollar and sovereign-debt crisis, with gold and other real assets serving as refuges as the U.S. economy confronts devaluation, rising prices, and a reconfiguration of global reserve currencies.

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The speaker warns that the US dollar's decline will have a significant impact on everyone globally. They believe that those involved in this plot should face criminal charges, a trial, and potentially the death penalty. The speaker claims that the plan to destroy the dollar started before Obama's time, but he and others have accelerated it. The ultimate goal is to establish a global currency and governance system. However, most people fail to grasp the full extent of this scheme and are distracted by other matters.

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Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 discuss the strategic direction of U.S.-China economic engagement and the future of the dollar. Speaker 1 argues that Obama should seek a financial arrangement with China when he travels to China, stating that “this would be the time because you really need to bring China into the creation of a new world order, financial world order.” He contends that “you need a new world order that China has to be part of the process of creating it, and they have to buy in. They have to own it.” He envisions a more stable global financial order resulting from China’s participation, with “coordinated policies.” Turning to the U.S. economy and the dollar, Speaker 1 addresses concerns about dollar weakness. He states that “an orderly decline of the dollar is actually desirable.” He explains that “A decline in the value of the dollar is necessary in order to compensate for the fact that The U. S. Economy will remain rather weak.” He further predicts that “China will emerge as the motor replacing The U.S. Consumer,” suggesting a shift in economic engine from the United States to China. He concludes that “there would be a slow decline in the value of the dollar, a managed decline.”

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The speaker asserts that the U.S. is in an era of building amid spending cuts, deregulation, and debt reduction, ideally without tariffs. Trade deficits with countries like China, Mexico, and Vietnam are worsening, which is unsustainable and hastening the downfall of the dollar and the U.S. standard of living. China's factory activity is declining, and workers are protesting unpaid wages, indicating that pressure from tariffs is working. The speaker criticizes the Federal Reserve for inaction while China's central bank is intervening. The global financial system is headed for a reset, and the Trump administration offers a chance for a reset that empowers the people, unlike the one pushed by the UN and Davos. The Bretton Woods system failed because of U.S. money printing for social programs and war. The speaker says that to solve this, trade imbalances and debt must be stopped, Fed manipulation must end, and the dollar must reign supreme. Trade imbalances and debt will rapidly contribute to economic Armageddon.

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We are at a decision-making point and very close to a recession, but something worse than a recession is possible if things aren't handled well. The monetary order is breaking down because we cannot spend the amounts of money we are spending. This issue is connected to the dollar and tariffs. Profound changes are occurring in our domestic order and the world order. These times are very much like the 1930s.

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Speaker 0 argues that losing the, the world standard dollar would be like losing a war, a major world war, and "We would not be the same country." The claim casts the dollar as a critical global benchmark whose disappearance would fundamentally change the United States, equating monetary dominance with the outcome of a major conflict and implying profound national implications. The statement underscores the perceived link between currency status and national power, suggesting that currency leadership shapes international influence and the country’s future trajectory. It frames the dollar's status as a strategic asset whose loss would amount to a strategic setback.

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The discussion centers on the surge in gold and silver prices and the idea that this signals a broader financial crisis. The hosts note gold recently around $4,600 per ounce and silver near $92, with silver has seen renewed interest as a potential hedge amid financial stress. Analysts point to silver production at about 800 million ounces per year, and bank short positions in silver reportedly totaling about 4.4 billion ounces; the argument is that if silver continues to rise, it could strain the big U.S. banks that have underwritten these shorts. Peter Schiff, a silver and gold expert and economist, argues that the price movements reflect a coming financial crisis akin to the subprime mortgage crisis of 2007, but this time tied to U.S. sovereign credit and the dollar. He notes that gold and silver have risen substantially—gold has more than doubled and silver has nearly tripled in the past year—and frames this as a warning of a dollar crisis and a U.S. treasury crisis that could hit next year. He emphasizes that foreign central banks are buying gold instead of U.S. treasuries, signaling a shift away from the dollar as the global reserve currency, and predicts that this will lead to higher consumer prices and higher interest rates as the dollar’s buying power collapses. Referring to Venezuela’s experience, Schiff connects the issue to the broader dynamics of global currency demand, suggesting that the U.S. has used the dollar’s reserve status to sustain higher levels of spending, but that the world is moving away from the dollar. He forecasts a much weaker purchasing power for ordinary Americans, with prices rising sharply while wages may not keep pace. He provides a provocative example, suggesting that a hamburger could jump from about $15 to $30 or $50, illustrating the potential magnitude of inflation and the erosion of real income. On the silver short position for banks, Schiff says those who are shorting silver, especially those who do not own the metal, are in trouble and could face significant losses, though he does not claim this alone would bankrupt banks. He argues that banks also face deteriorating loan books and housing market pressures, with commercial real estate already down and residential prices still adjusted. He contends the banking system is in a precarious position, contributing to the Fed’s rate cuts and policy moves aimed at propping up banks. For individuals, Schiff argues that the dollar’s reserve status has enabled living beyond means, and as the dollar declines, imported goods will become much more expensive. He advises a shift away from paper assets toward real money such as gold and silver, and highlights mining stocks as potential opportunities, noting that costs for mining may be lower than a year ago while prices for metals rise. He asserts that junior mining stocks could outperform as the market recognizes their leverage to rising metal prices, and promotes diversification into gold and silver investments as a hedge against a dollar crisis.

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The speaker discusses the impact of the global economy on the US dollar and its need to be backed by tangible assets. They mention that international financiers are gradually losing faith in the dollar as the world's reserve currency, leading to its depreciation. To maintain its status, the US is turning to its European colonies for tangible assets since they are losing their African and Latin American colonies. The speaker expresses concern about this surreal and submissive cycle.

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The speaker argues the current trade system has failed, leading to a wealth transfer from the U.S. overseas via trade deficits due to other countries' industrial policies. To rectify this, tariffs are needed to offset the fundamental unfairness and enforce global trade balance, penalizing countries with persistent surpluses. While adjustments to supply chains and temporary price increases may occur, systemic inflation is unlikely. Increased U.S. production will offset inflationary pressures. The speaker dismisses models predicting inflation from tariffs, citing past experiences and China's deflation despite trade barriers. The speaker believes the President's program of tax cuts, spending cuts, deregulation, more energy and tariffs will be anti-inflationary. The speaker views China as an existential threat, citing its military expansion, espionage, and global ambitions. The speaker advocates for strategic decoupling, balanced trade, independent technology development with allies, and regulated investments to protect American interests.

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Donald Trump believes the American economy is reaching a point of decline, anticipating its fall in the coming months. This decline will lead to the end of dollar hegemony and U.S. hegemony, which the speaker supports.

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Larry Johnson and Glenn discuss the shifting dynamics of the US dollar, the international financial system, and the rise of competing powers. - Johnson recalls the 1965 term exorbitant privilege describing the US dollar’s reserve-currency advantages. In 1971, the US closed the gold window, ending fixed gold value for the dollar; the dollar later became backed by “our promise,” enabling the petrodollar system as oil purchases were conducted in dollars. The dollar’s dominance rested on predictability, a stable legal system, and non-abusive use of the dollar as an economic tool rather than a political weapon. - Trump-era sanctions expanded broadly, impacting friends and adversaries alike, and BRICS nations began moving away from the dollar. Russia’s disconnection from SWIFT after its 2022 actions is noted as a turning point that encouraged the BRICS’ development of alternative financial infrastructure, including China’s cross-border interbank payment system (CIPS). This shift accelerates the decline of the dollar’s dominance. - Nations like Russia and China (and India, Brazil) are unloading US Treasuries and increasing gold and silver holdings. This is tied to concerns about the dollar’s reliability and the reduced faith in paper promises. The BRICS countries reportedly plan a currency tied to gold, with components of their reserves backing individual BRICS currencies, signaling a structural move away from the dollar. - The paper-gold issue is central: for every ounce of real gold, there is a range of 20-to-1 to 100-to-1 in paper gold. This disparity can undermine trust in the paper promise and create a run on physical gold. The price gap between New York (lower) and Shanghai (higher) for gold demonstrates a market dislocation and growing demand for physical metal. - Glenn emphasizes that a unipolar dollar system allows the US to run large deficits via inflation, which acts as a hidden tax on global dollar holders. Weaponizing the dollar through sanctions challenges trust and accelerates decoupling, prompting other nations to seek alternatives to reduce exposure. - Johnson argues that the US is confronting a historic realignment: the Bretton Woods order is dissolving, the dollar’s international dominance is waning, and sanctions and coercive policies are provoking pushback. He highlights Japan as a major remaining dollar treasuries holder that is now offloading, further increasing dollar supply and depressing its value. - The geopolitical implications are significant. Johnson warns that potential US actions against Iran—given their strategic position and the Gulf oil supply—could trigger a severe global disruption, including a price surge in oil. He notes that such actions would complicate global stability and magnify inflationary pressures. - The discussion also covers NATO’s cohesion, Western attempts to shape global alignments, and how rapidly shifting leverage could undermine existing alliances. Johnson suggests that Russia’s strategic gains in the war in Ukraine, combined with Western missteps, may prompt a rapid reevaluation of settlements and borders, while also noting that Russia’s position has hardened. - On Venezuela, Johnson argues that the stated pretexts (drug trafficking, oil control) were questionable and points to economic motives, including revenue opportunities for political allies like Paul Singer, and to Greenland’s strategic interests as possible motivators for US actions. - Looking ahead, Johnson predicts hyperinflation for the United States as the dollar loses value globally, while gold and silver retain value. He asserts that the ruble and yuan may hold value better, and that a mass shift toward de-dollarization is likely to continue, potentially culminating in a new multipolar financial order. - Both speakers agree that trust and predictability are crucial; the current trajectory—threats, sanctions, and unilateral actions—undermines trust and accelerates the move toward alternative currencies and stronger physical-commodity holdings. The overall tone is that a pivotal, watershed moment is unfolding in the global monetary system.

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China’s president Xi Jinping has explicitly called for the renminbi (yuan) to attain global reserve currency status, stating that China must build a powerful currency that can be widely used in international trade, investment, and foreign exchange markets and that can be held by central banks as a reserve asset. This is a clear, definitive statement of intent that signals Beijing’s aim for the yuan to play a central role in the global monetary system and to reduce reliance on the US dollar. Beijing surfaced this message with intentional timing. The remarks, originally delivered in 2024 to senior Communist Party and financial officials, were only recently made public. Xi’s reserve currency ambitions and plans were published in Qiushi, the party’s most authoritative policy journal. The timing matters because the remarks appear as the US dollar faces pressure, global monetary uncertainty rises, and central banks worldwide reassess their exposure to the dollar. Trade tensions, the growth of sanctions, and rising political risk have contributed to this reevaluation, and China has moved from quietly expanding yuan usage for trade to explicitly naming its ultimate goal. Xi outlined the institutional foundations he believes are required to support reserve status: a powerful central bank with effective monetary control, globally competitive financial institutions, and international financial centers such as Shanghai and Shenzhen capable of attracting global capital and influencing global pricing. As for where things stand today, IMF data shows the yuan still has a long way to go. It currently makes up less than 2% of global foreign exchange reserves. The dollar still dominates with well over 57%, though it has declined from about 71% in 2000, and the euro is roughly 20%. China still has capital controls, and the currency is not fully convertible. Why would central banks want another fiat currency in their reserves? The attraction of the dollar and the euro lies in the backing of the United States and the institutional credibility behind them. The yuan’s appeal, according to the discussion, is that it is becoming a fiat currency with implicit gold backing. China’s officially reported gold holdings have risen to roughly 2,300 tons, per the World Gold Council, with steady year-after-year purchases, including at least fourteen consecutive months of net purchases through 2025. However, many analysts believe China holds more, with estimates based on trade flows, import data, and disclosure gaps suggesting true holdings closer to 3,005 tons, and some higher-end estimates proposing up to 10,000 tons or more. This gold accumulation serves as a hard asset anchor in an era where trust in fiat currencies is perceived to be weakening. China may be gearing up to offer an alternative linked to gold. It may not be ready to displace the dollar tomorrow, but it is clearly moving toward challenging King Dollar’s throne.

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The US dollar's dominance is being challenged by countries like Iran, Libya, and China who are bypassing it in trade. Gold is being used as an alternative currency, with countries like Germany and Venezuela repatriating their gold reserves. The Federal Reserve's increasing currency printing is seen as a threat to the dollar's stability. These actions are seen as accelerating the demise of the dollar standard, signaling a need for change soon.

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Jeffrey Sachs argues that "economic statecraft" is a euphemism for coercion, describing it as "war by economic means" used largely by the United States to crush other economies rather than to promote development or cooperation. He notes that treasury officials have framed it proudly as a tool to bring about regime change, citing Scott Besent’s Davos remarks about crushing the Iranian economy to foment change. Sachs emphasizes that this machinery is "warfare" aimed at destruction, not at improving well-being or enriching the United States, and it has real human costs—driving impoverishment, health crises, and rising mortality. To understand this tool, Sachs situates it within American imperial practice, which he says relies on indirect rule through puppet regimes rather than outright territorial conquest. He traces the lineage to the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii, the phasing of interventions in Latin America under the Monroe Doctrine’s Roosevelt Corollary, and the 1954 Guatemalan coup against Jacobo Arbenz. He cites Lindsey O’Rourke’s Covert Regime Change, which counted 64 covert regime-change operations by the United States between 1947 and 1989. Economic statecraft, in his view, can function as a regime-change instrument by weakening an economy enough to destabilize a government, facilitating CIA-led or CIA-backed interventions, sometimes wrapped as color revolutions. In the Venezuela case, Sachs traces the shift from a failed 2002 coup attempt to economic coercion as the primary mechanism of pressure. He explains how Venezuela’s oil wealth, once seen as the world’s largest reserves, interacted with U.S. corporate and political power—ExxonMobil and Chevron among them—and how that dynamic fed efforts to topple the Chávez/Maduro governments. He describes the sequence starting with 2014 color-revolution attempts, the role of U.S. funding and media operations via organizations like the National Endowment for Democracy, and the crackdown that followed protests. Sanctions escalated under Obama with the designation of Venezuela as a national security emergency and intensified under Trump, including confiscating foreign-exchange reserves, freezing accounts, and declaring PDVSA under sanction. This culminated in Severe economic collapse: oil production fell about 75% from 2016 to 2020, currency and import capacities deteriorated, and per-capita output dropped by about two-thirds, which Sachs characterizes as "worse than a war." He also points to Trump’s unorthodox actions, such as naming Juan Guaidó as president in IMF context, signaling a unilateral reshaping of legitimacy. For Iran, Sachs describes decades of comprehensive sanctions and Trump’s renewed push to crush the economy using OFAC and extraterritorial sanctions. He cites Scott Besant’s interview claiming that by December, the currency had plummeted and dollar shortages followed, framing this as a deliberate regime-change strategy. He notes that mainstream media largely omitted the causal narrative—U.S. role in provoking protests—despite Besant’s public account. Looking ahead, Sachs discusses the multi-polarity challenge. He suggests that the dollar's dominance is waning as alternative settlement systems emerge, such as non-dollar currencies and parallel institutions, notably driven by China and BRICS members. He envisions a shift toward non-dollar settlements—potentially 25% of global transactions within ten years—enabled by digital settlements and new infrastructure that reduces the reach of U.S. extraterritorial sanctions. However, achieving this requires new, dollar-independent institutions, since existing banks remain reluctant to abandon dollar-based business due to sanctions risk. He concludes by noting that the United States’ heavy-handed currency policy may not be sustainable in the long run, as sanctions reach could lessen once non-dollar settlement networks gain traction. The host closes, recognizing this as a pivotal moment where U.S. coercion could either deter rivals or precipitate broader self-harm, and thanks Sachs for his insights.

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Peter Schiff and the hosts discuss how surging gold and silver prices relate to potential banking instability and a broader dollar crisis. Key points: - Silver production is about 800,000,000 ounces per year, while bank shorts on silver are claimed at 4,400,000,000 ounces according to some reports. The implication is that if silver continues to rise, the biggest banks in America could face severe coverage challenges for their short positions. The discussion notes that many banks are “barely covering their asses to stay afloat.” - Gold and silver price levels are highlighted: gold at about $4,600 per ounce after a bounce, and silver at about $92 per ounce. Peter Schiff, introduced as a silver and gold expert and economist, has authored The Real Crash, How to Save Yourself and Your Country, and America’s Coming Bankruptcy. The host mentions the book. - Peter Schiff’s perspective on timing and crisis: he says the 2013 book predicted the current situation and that gold and silver have risen significantly—gold up, silver up substantially. He believes the price moves signal a major warning of a financial or economic crisis, comparing it to the subprime warning before the 2008 crisis. He asserts this time the warning concerns the U.S. government sovereign credit and a potential dollar crisis and U.S. Treasury crisis, possibly unfolding next year. - Connection to global debt and the dollar: Schiff explains that much debt is sustainable because the U.S. dollar serves as the global reserve currency, enabling continued spending. He notes foreign central banks buying gold instead of U.S. Treasuries, moving out of dollars into gold, and cites U.S. intervention in oil-rich Venezuela as part of broader moves to keep oil prices down. He argues that the dollar’s reserve status is eroding, and a meaningful decline in the dollar relative to other currencies could soon impact consumer prices and interest rates, leading to higher costs for Americans. - Impact on the average person: Schiff asserts that the reserve currency status has long supported a standard of living that relies on importing goods paid for with dollars created “out of thin air.” As the dollar collapses and the world shifts away from the dollar, the dollars earned and saved by ordinary people will buy less, with price spikes across goods and services. He suggests a future scenario where prices rise dramatically while wages do not keep pace, giving an example of a hamburger potentially rising from $15 to $30 or $50, and services versus goods diverging in price movement. - Preparation and investment stance: Schiff emphasizes that gold and silver have performed well since the turn of the century, outperforming the Dow in real terms. He argues for moving wealth into real money rather than paper assets and notes, in general terms, opportunities in mining stocks as a hedge, including juniors and mid-tier producers. He references the broader strategy of diversifying out of U.S. stocks, bonds, and dollars to protect wealth during what he describes as a coming real crisis; he stresses focusing on real assets rather than relying on the dollar. - Final remarks: Schiff reiterates that the crisis is coming and that some Americans should consider protecting wealth through precious metals and mining opportunities, while the hosts acknowledge the outlook and thank him for the insights.

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The fate of America's economy has been determined by a senior Obama administration official who stated, "We're just going to kill the dollar." This single sentence explains the entire economic agenda domestically and globally, rendering all other questions irrelevant. It implies a significant shift in economic policy.

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Mario and Jeff discuss what the current geopolitical and monetary environment means for gold, the US dollar, and the broader system that underpins global finance. - Gold and asset roles - Gold is a portfolio asset that does not compete with the dollar; it competes with the stock market and tends to rise when people are concerned about risky assets. It is a “safe haven store value” rather than a monetary instrument aimed at replacing the dollar. - Historically, gold did not reliably hedge inflation in 2021–2022 when the economy seemed to be recovering; in downturns, gold becomes more attractive as a store of value. Recent moves up in gold price over the last two months are viewed as pricing in multiple factors, including potential economic downturn and questionable macro conditions. - The dollar and de-dollarization - The eurodollar system is a vast, largely ledger-based network of US-dollar balances held offshore, allowing near-instantaneous movement of funds. It is not simply “the euro,” and it predates and outlived any single country’s policy. Replacing it would be like recreating the Internet from scratch. - De-dollarization discussions are driven more by political narratives than monetary mechanics. Central banks selling dollar assets during shortages is a liquidity management response, not a repudiation of the dollar. - The dollar’s dominance remains intact because there is no ready substitute meeting all its functions. Replacing the dollar would require replacing the entire set of dollar functions across global settlement, payments, and liquidity provisioning. - Bank reserves, reserves composition, and the size of the eurodollar market - The share of US dollars in foreign reserves has declined, but this is not seen as a meaningful signal about the system’s functionality or dominance; the real issue is the level of settlement and liquidity, which remains heavily dollar-based. - The eurodollar market is enormous and largely offshore, with little public reporting. It is described as a “black hole” that drives movements in the system and is extremely hard to measure precisely. - Current dynamics: debt, safety, and liquidity - The debt ceiling and growing US debt are acknowledged as concerns, but the view presented is that debt dynamics do not destabilize the Treasury market as long as demand for safety and liquidity remains high. In a depression-like environment, US Treasuries are still viewed as the safest and most liquid form of debt, which sustains their price and keeps yields relatively contained. - Gold is safe but not highly liquid as collateral; Treasuries provide liquidity. Central banks use gold to diversify reserves and stabilize currencies (e.g., yuan), but Treasuries remain central to collateral needs in a broad financial system. - China, the US, and global growth - China’s economy faces deflationary pressures, with ten consecutive quarters of deflation in the Chinese GDP deflator, raising questions about domestic demand. Attempts to stimulate have had limited success; overproduction and rebalancing efforts aim to reduce supply to match demand, potentially increasing unemployment and lowering investment. - The US faces a weakening labor market; recent job shedding and rising delinquencies in consumer and corporate credit markets heighten uncertainty about the credit system. This underpins gold’s appeal as a store of value. - China remains heavily dependent on the US consumer; despite decoupling rhetoric, demand for Chinese goods and the global supply chain ties keep the US-China relationship central to global dynamics. The prospect of a Chinese-led fourth industrial revolution (AI, quantum computing) is viewed skeptically as unlikely to overcome structural inefficiencies of a centralized planning model. - Gold, Bitcoin, and alternative systems - Bitcoin is described as a Nasdaq-stock-like store of value tied to tech equities; it is not seen as a robust currency or a wide-scale payment system based on liquidity. It could, in theory, be a superior version of gold someday, but today it behaves like other speculative assets. - The conversation weighs the potential for a shift away from the eurodollar toward private digital currencies or a mix of public-private digital currencies. The idea that a completely decentralized system could replace the eurodollar is acknowledged as a long-term possibility, but currently, stablecoins are evolving toward stand-alone viability rather than a wholesale replacement. - The broader arc and forecast - The trade war is seen as a redistribution of productive capacity rather than a definitive win for either side; macroeconomic outcomes in the 2020s are shaped by monetary conditions and the eurodollar system’s functioning more than by policy interventions alone. - The speakers foresee a future with multipolarity and a gradually evolving monetary regime, possibly moving from the eurodollar toward a suite of digital currencies—some private, some public—while gold remains a key store of value in times of systemic risk. - Argentina, Russia, and Europe - Argentina’s crisis is framed as an outcome of eurodollar malfunctioning; IMF interventions offer only temporary stabilization in the face of ongoing liquidity and deflationary pressures. - Russia remains integrated with global finance through channels like the eurodollar system, even after sanctions; the resilience of energy sectors and external support from partners like China helps it endure. - Europe is acknowledged as facing a difficult, depressing outlook, reinforcing the broader narrative of a challenging global macro environment. Overall, gold is framed as a prudent hedge within a complex, interconnected, and evolving eurodollar system, with no imminent replacement of the dollar in sight, while the path toward a multi-currency or digital-currency future remains uncertain and gradual.

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Donald Trump’s second term is accelerating the US dollar’s downfall and could reshape the global monetary system in a manner reminiscent of Nixon’s 1971 move ending the Bretton Woods era, according to Guangzhou, chief economist at Bank of China’s investment arm. Trump’s aggressive tariffs rolled out in April are rattling global trade and finance to their core, with Guangzhou drawing a chilling parallel to the Nixon shock. The dollar’s grip on global reserves has fallen to a thirty-year low of 56.32% in Q2, down 1.47 percentage points. Nations are ditching US assets in droves, with net purchases plunging 94.4% to a mere $510,000,000, based on US Treasury data. Guangzhou notes that Trump’s war on the Fed’s independence is eroding confidence in US policy, making this meltdown dwarf the chaos of the 1970s. For China, this scenario presents prime timing to influence the currency landscape. Guangzhou urges Beijing to turbocharge the yuan’s global rise by expanding financial clout. The proposed path includes swinging open financial gates, syncing with international norms, unleashing innovative yuan tools, and supercharging Shanghai and Hong Kong as powerhouse hubs. As the dollar fades, the yuan could rise, potentially ushering in a multipolar currency showdown. If you’re craving razor-sharp geopolitical breakdowns like this, subscribe to New Rules Geopolitics to stay on top of global trends.

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Marco Rubio traveled to Germany for the Munich Security Conference and delivered what the program calls the most important American speech in the last thirty years, calling on Europe to join Trump's new world order or face the consequences. He told NATO allies that playtime is over and that a new world order is being written by the United States; Europe is asked to join, or face being left behind. Rubio framed NATO as a transaction between countries and said it is only worth defending if you are worth defending, accusing European leaders of managing Europe’s decline and warning that if Europe continues on a liberal, destructive path, the United States will be done with them. He criticized a liberal globalist agenda of a borderless world and mass immigration, and argued for reform of the existing international order rather than dismantling it. Rubio asserted that the old rules of the world are dead and that the West must adapt to a new era of geopolitics. He indicated that these are conversations he has been having with allies and other world leaders behind closed doors, and that these talks are accelerating. The speech conveyed a clear ultimatum: the US wants Europe with us, but is prepared to rebuild the global order alone if necessary. Rubio stated that the US would prefer to act with Europe, but would do so independently if Europe does not align. The discussion then ties these geopolitics to currency and economics. The US dollar’s role as the reserve currency and its strength are central to the old world order. The Trump administration is signaling that the strong dollar religion is over, with the dollar weakened in Trump’s second term to make US exports cheaper. Reuters is cited as reporting that China’s treasury holdings have dropped to their lowest level since 2008 as banks are urged to curb exposure to US treasuries, suggesting China is stepping back from funding America and that the burden may shift to US funding via domestic sources. The narrative contrasts this with China’s push for a stronger yuan and global reserve status, including potential expansion of currency use in trade, while Europe sits in the middle, invited to join the US-led shift or be sidelined. There is mention of a possible April Beijing trip by Trump to meet Xi Jinping. The segment also notes internal GOP dynamics, describing Rubio as a neocon favorite and predicting a contest between Rubio’s hawkish approach and JD Vance, who reportedly does not want broad war expansions. The speaker frames Rubio’s speech as a signal flare indicating a real-time reorganization of the West, with the dollar at the blast radius. The sponsor segment follows, tying the topics to critical minerals and a program named Project Vault, a $12 billion strategic reserve for precious minerals to protect the private sector from supply shocks. At a Critical Minerals Ministerial, JD Vance and Marco Rubio delivered a message to China about preventing market flooding from killing domestic projects. The sponsor promotes North American Niobium, a company exploring for niobium and two rare earths (neodymium and praseodymium), describing niobium as critical for aerospace and defense applications, with no domestic US production and 90% global supply controlled by Brazil. The company’s base includes Quebec, Canada, and it highlights leadership from Joseph Carrabas of Rio Tinto and Cliffs Natural Resources fame, and Carrie Lynn Findlay, a former Canadian cabinet minister. The ticker symbol NIOMF is provided, with notes that shares are tradable on major US brokerages, and a reminder for due diligence.

The Pomp Podcast

The Federal Reserve & Wealth Inequality | Karen Petrou | Pomp Podcast #508
Guests: Karen Petrou
reSee.it Podcast Summary
In this interview, Karen Petrou discusses the Federal Reserve's significant role in economic inequality in America, as outlined in her book "Engine of Inequality: The Fed and the Future of Wealth in America." She explains that the Fed's monetary policy, including interest rate manipulation and quantitative easing, disproportionately benefits wealthy individuals who invest in financial markets, while middle and lower-income households struggle with debt and limited access to wealth-building assets. Petrou critiques the Fed's response to the COVID-19 crisis, highlighting the establishment of facilities that bailed out various sectors, including zombie companies that do not contribute to economic growth. She emphasizes the need for the Fed to recalibrate its approach to better reflect the realities of income distribution and to foster genuine economic growth. Petrou concludes that without systemic changes, the U.S. will face continued slow growth, rising inequality, and societal anger. She advocates for a more equitable monetary policy that supports all Americans.

Breaking Points

Peter Schiff: Dollar COLLAPSING, Crisis Worse Than 2008
Guests: Peter Schiff
reSee.it Podcast Summary
In this discussion, the hosts explore a view that the dollar could lose reserve status as central banks tilt toward gold and other assets. Peter Schiff argues the dollar will collapse and be replaced, a shift tied to global instability, rising gold prices, and a reassessment of how currencies back global trade. The segment also references Ray Dalio’s ideas about the end of fiat currencies and the potential implications for U.S. assets, debt, and the role of the dollar in everyday purchases. The speakers acknowledge that even if a sharp, immediate collapse is not certain, there is a discernible erosion of confidence in U.S. economic leadership and the safety of dollar-denominated investments, which could influence savers, exporters, and policy responses alike. They also note domestic effects, including AI-driven job cuts at major firms and how a weaker dollar might raise import costs while easing debt burdens for some. The hosts discuss policy signals and the uncertainty surrounding money’s future.
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