Damus
Lyn Alden profile picture
Lyn Alden
@LynAlden
I see some people saying, “it’s not gold going up, it’s the dollar going down” and things like that.

That’s not really the case, and there’s a simple test to see why.

When a currency crashes, it loses value relative to everything. Other currencies, real estate, stocks, precious metals, etc. Prices of normal goods and services skyrocket.

In this bull run, precious metals gained value vs other things. Gold vs oil. Gold vs stocks. Gold vs real estate. Silver vs oil, etc.

The dollar is rangebound vs other major currencies. The supply growth of the dollar this past year was 5%. It’s gold and other precious metals that went up vs everything. Partly based on fundamentals, and now seemingly due to momentum.

Now, where there is some truth to the statement: central banks in aggregate haven’t added to their holding of treasuries in ten years. The only foreign treasury purchases have been in the private sector, and at a rate lower than total US debt growth. But central banks have been buying gold. There is indeed a gradual shift toward neutral reserve assets afoot, ever since around 2009.

But that a very long process. That source of demand didn’t single-handedly drive the huge boom in precious metals over this past year. This was like a volleyball held under water and let go, soaring back up.
3012❤️62🤙6👍3💜3❤️2♥️1
MAHDOOD · 3w
So what you’re saying is to stack more sats?
Chad Lupkes · 3w
Do not go gentle into that fiat night, Old wealth should burn and trade at close of day; Buy, buy before the dying of the dollar. Though wise men at their end know cash is slight, Because their savings forked no gains, they say, Do not go gentle into that fiat night. Good men, the last wave by...
CptKook · 3w
Yes but the massive paper to physical gold ratio, futures dominance, and centralized/opaque supply makes gold easily manipulable. Do you expect the trend to break soon?
Austin · 3w
How hard is it to sell gold? If the friction increases with price, is that a bubble indicator? I’ve heard that silver bullion is only getting 70% (hear say, no details)
KrP · 3w
Good points
Judge Hardcase · 3w
I don't know if what we're seeing is a short squeeze on precious metals due to a massive unwinding of paper derivatives... but this is what I imagine such a short squeeze would look like.
Prince Aleph · 3w
The dollar is stronger than it was for much of the last 50 years (apart from a big spike a few decades ago when the dollar was very strong). Gold and other PMs are going through a speculative mania like they have every couple of decades and some trading it make a lot of money. I predict it will bu...
Joe Stauffacher · 3w
How do you explain the price of Gold ratio to the S&P… the S&P sets a new high while the comparison to Gold’s value is a 12 year low seems to imply the value of the dollar is going bye bye. Meanwhile all these people invested in S&P are begging for corporations to control them… seems like th...
Dipun Mistry · 3w
How is this different to everyone saying bitcoin is not going up, dollar is going down? Why call this out for gold but I rarely see it being called out for bitcoin? Is there a difference?
nostrich · 3w
FUD in the financial market, why, current leadership, threats and decisions reshaping ways to make money. So the traditionalist run to Gold, why, because its price is less volatile and they understand its simplicity as the turmoil settles and the future is predictable.
Stoic Compound · 3w
You identify the gradual shift since 2009. That is the mispricing. Markets anticipate a linear decay of the Treasury standard. The reality is exponential. When private sector liquidity joins Central Bank accumulation, the move isn't just a correction. It is a convex flight to safety.
BottleTeams · 3w
I don't think you know what you're talking about https://image.nostr.build/e9441138fef63904e2f692d84374c345392ffbc5a64e68329e58d0cf618083d9.jpg
shortwavesurfer2009 · 3w
I will point out that you can't really compare between the dollar and other currencies, because those currencies are also devalued at almost the same rate, so the valuation won't change very much between them. All fiat currencies are balloons that are inflating at almost the same rate. One might be ...
August · 3w
Why not both? https://blossom.primal.net/99df65b6e6e86386c6657d84b5a2924aa23c010ad265b9029d189d14dfb03710.png
Zsubmariner · 3w
Did they let the ball go on purpose or did it slip out of their hands? I think the same thing is happening to energy as we transition away from the petro dollar. I wrote our my current model of how this plays out if you are interested. (Also my model of why this cycle was weak and why I don't thin...
Ben Ewing · 2w
So it’s a tulip bubble basically
sister_sam · 2w
How exactly is this any real versus engineered bull run?
Turk · 2w
Did they let go of the ball or did they run out of energy to keep the ball under water?
Hard Money Herald · 2w
This distinction matters more than people realize. A currency crash reprices everything upward uniformly. What we're seeing is gold specifically gaining purchasing power against other real assets — oil, housing, equities. That's not a denominator problem, it's a numerator signal. The system is re-...
Charlie · 2w
That "volleyball held underwater" analogy is perfect. Do you think Bitcoin is currently lagging Gold because the market still treats it as "risk-on" liquidity, while Gold is bidding as pure "risk-off" safety?
Hard Money Herald · 2w
The 'gold vs everything' framing cuts through the noise. When gold outperforms stocks, bonds, real estate, and bitcoin simultaneously, the signal isn't about any single currency — it's about a regime change in how institutions are pricing systemic risk. Curious if you see the recent paper-physical...