Selasa, 31 Maret 2026

Putin is Hoarding Gold, You Should Too

Practical Investment Analysis for the New Energy Economy

Putin is Hoarding Gold, You Should Too

If you never thought that the government would come for your gold, I have some bad news for you — it already happened!

In fact, it took place on January 30, 1934.

That day, one signature from President Franklin D. Roosevelt brought the Gold Reserve Act into law. 

And just like that, every gold coin and gold bar in America became government property. 

What about the Federal Reserve's gold? Well, it was confiscated. Or how about your gold? Yup, that got taken too. But surely the gold held in banks was safe from the government? Nope, that was handed over as well. 

In return, Americans got $35 per ounce.

Overnight, gold prices soared by 69% as the dollar's value plummeted. In Section 5, the Treasury was prohibited from redeeming dollars for gold, and Section 6 of the new law banned financial institutions from doing the same.

In other words, the system suddenly inverted.

For a century, you could've walked into a bank and converted paper into gold coins whenever you wanted. Then all of a sudden, the government converted gold into dollars whether you liked it or not.

Regulations governed everything. 

Gold had to be held as bars — coins were forbidden. You could only buy gold items weighing less than fifteen ounces without a license. 

Of course, anything heavier required government approval.

Violators faced stiff penalties.

Today, history is once again repeating itself. 

eac 3-30-26

Trump's Tariff Windfall is Turning Into Cash Checks Did You Claim Yours?

Nearly $400 billion a year is now flowing into Washington from foreign imports.

A portion of that money is already being redirected into "Tariff Rebate Checks," paying qualifying Americans up to $8,276 every quarter.

The next payout window is approaching fast.

Click here for the details.

Putin is Hoarding Gold, You Should Too

Nearly a hundred years later, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree banning the export of refined gold bars weighing more than 100 grams from Russia, effective May 1, 2026.

Times haven't changed, and you can bet that gold is just as precious.

But Putin's move wasn't subtle — it's about control.

I don't think you'd be surprised to learn that Russia is the world's second-largest gold producer. 

So, the decree prohibits individuals, legal entities, and entrepreneurs from exporting gold exceeding 100 grams — roughly the size of an apple!

Granted, exceptions exist for specific airports with permits from the Federal Assay Chamber, and commercial banks aren't affected.

But the intent is crystal clear…

Russia is consolidating domestic gold reserves and tightening control over capital flows. The country's Deputy Finance Minister put it bluntly, saying that gold has increasingly become a substitute for foreign currency in illicit transactions.

The ban also comes alongside restrictions on ruble cash exports exceeding $100,000. 

In Moscow, gold retailers reported an immediate uptick in inquiries. Citizens rushed to sell or export holdings before the May deadline.

And here's what everyone is overlooking about Russia's timing…

Gold hit an all-time high of $5,595/oz back in late January.

Since then, we've seen a sharp correction down to around $4,100/oz by mid-March — a brutal 23% decline driven by inflation concerns and expectations that the Fed might hold rates steady or even raise them.

Despite the pullback, every major bank maintains bullish forecasts for the rest of 2026:

  • J.P. Morgan targets $6,300/oz by year-end. 

  • Wells Fargo upgraded its forecast to $6,100-$6,200/oz. 

  • Goldman Sachs sees $4,900/oz by December, with projections of $5,400/oz by late 2027.

  • UBS predicts $5,900/oz. 

  • And Morgan Stanley revised its 2026 outlook upward to $4,400/oz.

The institutional consensus clusters between $5,400 and $6,300 for year-end 2026. 

So why the continued bullishness despite the recent sell-off? I think the answer is simple.

Look, the structural reasons that drove gold from $2,600/oz to over $5,000/oz over the past 12 months haven't changed. And yet, central banks are still buying as the U.S. dollar outlook remains soft — fiscal deficits aren't shrinking.

And those messy geopolitical tensions? Not only are they still around, but they've exploded as the Middle East erupted into chaos over the last month.

For the first time since 1996, gold now accounts for a larger share of central bank reserves than U.S. Treasuries. 

Think about that for a minute…

Central banks accumulated roughly 1,000 tonnes of gold in 2025; J.P. Morgan forecasts approximately 800 tonnes of purchases in 2026.

India and China continue receiving Iranian oil and gold shipments despite sanctions, and Russia's export ban suggests that Moscow is hoarding the precious metal rather than selling.

Folks, this is classic safe-haven behavior during prolonged geopolitical stress.

The Iran war reinforced gold's role as the ultimate insurance policy.

Investors have fled to gold as oil prices spiked over the last few weeks. 

Gold doesn't just respond to crisis — it anticipates it.

But unlike equities, which require faith in economic growth, or bonds, which require faith in government solvency, gold requires no counterparty. 

You own it, hold it, and it can't be devalued by central bank printing presses (or defaulted on by overleveraged governments, for that matter).

This is why gold remains the definitive safe haven despite a long history of governments trying in vain to control, confiscate, or make it obsolete.

Holy Grail Discovered:
MIT GENIUS CRACKS FREE ENERGY! 

EI Image 3

Forget everything you know! This "untapped powerhouse" can meet "global electricity demand 140 times over" with FREE, ENDLESS POWER, eclipsing oil, solar, and nuclear!

And if you owned even a small part of it, you could get incredibly rich and stay that way for the next 100 years.

Gold's Path Forward: From Confiscation to Tokenization

Now here's where things get really interesting…

The most exciting evolution in gold markets isn't happening in vaults, but rather on blockchains.

The tokenized gold market's value crossed $6 billion in early February 2026 — quadrupling since the start of the year. 

Digital gold now represents the second-largest gold investment vehicle in the world by volume.

Only the $165 billion SPDR Gold Shares ETF is bigger. 

However, unlike traditional ETFs, which are fund shares often lacking physical redemption rights for retail users, tokenized gold gives holders a direct digital claim to the physical metal

You can see the appeal, right? 

Speed and accessibility.

With gold at $4,500/oz, a standard one-ounce bar is now out of reach for many investors — tokenization solves affordability by allowing fractional ownership.

But it also solves liquidity problems due to the fact that settlements are instant. In other words, you don't have to wait for a bank wire to clear any longer. 

The ability to swap gold for stablecoins at 3:00 AM on a Sunday has become essential for institutional risk management. When geopolitical tensions flare and markets panic, waiting for a bank wire to clear is no longer an option.

Remember the lessons of the past…

Roosevelt's Gold Reserve Act of 1934 didn't eliminate gold's importance, it concentrated control into government hands and proved that even the most powerful nation on Earth couldn't suppress demand for it.

President Nixon severed the dollar's link to gold in 1971, and President Ford finally permitted U.S. citizens to own gold again in 1974.

Now Russia is restricting gold exports in 2026.

Governments keep trying to control gold because gold represents freedom from government control. Going forward, tokenization will simply be the latest iteration of that eternal tension.

It's a way to own gold that bypasses traditional financial infrastructure, settles instantly, and operates beyond the reach of capital controls.

Trust in fiat currencies will continue eroding, geopolitical uncertainty becomes structural rather than cyclical — yet gold remains what it has always been: the ultimate safe haven asset. 

The lesson hasn't changed: Gold endures.

Until next time,

Keith Kohl Signature

Keith Kohl

P.S. What Triggered a Worldwide Revolt Against the Dollar?

A global shift away from the U.S. dollar is gaining momentum. Countries are increasing gold reserves, exploring non-dollar trade, and repositioning their balance sheets. This is "MoneyQuake" — the worldwide revolt against an 80-year monetary regime that can no longer support its own weight. And four tiny gold plays could surge 13,000% as the dollar era ends by design.

follow basicCheck us out on YouTube!

Fb Li Tw

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar