$5,000 Gold, Rising Yields & the Collapse of Trust
Matthew Piepenburg, Partner at VON GREYERZ, explains why the current surge in gold ($5,000+) and silver ($100+) is a symptom of a much deeper, worldwide problem – the accelerating loss of trust in sovereign debt and the fiat currencies which artificially sustain the same.
Speaking with Kitco News at VRIC 2026 in Vancouver, Piepenburg examines the warning signs now emerging across global bond markets. Rising yields in Japan, the US and Europe, even as central banks intervene, signal that sovereign IOUs are being quietly repriced. What has long been labelled “risk-free-return” is increasingly revealing itself as return-free-risk.
These developments are not isolated events. They are the inevitable consequence of decades of debt accumulation, monetary expansion and deliberate currency debasement. Physical gold’s rise is therefore not speculative excess, but the market’s inevitable response to a system stretched beyond its limits.
As trust in paper promises continues to deteriorate, central banks are repositioning gold not as a currency for spending, but as a neutral settlement asset that mitigates counterparty risk with greater trust and value than paper currencies and promises.
This interview explores why the bond market (not equity indices) is the true signal investors should watch, and why physical gold is once again emerging as the ultimate form of wealth preservation.
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