05/27/2026
Money vs. Currency
Central banks began increasing gold purchases in their reserve accounts years ago. One reason often discussed is diversification away from concentrated exposure to fiat currencies and sovereign debt.
Think about it… central banks can create additional currency, yet many of them are buying gold.
To me, that raises an interesting question.
My opinion: gold is where reserves migrate when confidence, scarcity, and preserving purchasing power become priorities over long periods of time.
Gold = money.
Currency = credit.
That distinction matters.
A U.S. dollar is legally a currency and even carries the wording “Federal Reserve Note” — a reminder that modern monetary systems operate differently than commodity-backed money.
History shows currencies can be expanded over time. Hard assets tend to attract attention when debt levels become elevated.
When debt reaches very high levels, concerns about debt sustainability, financial repression, monetization, or even sovereign debt stress become more relevant to watch.
Not investment advice — I've been talking about this for over 10 years, but I believe it is just something everyone needs to be thinking about more and more.