|

Why owning Gold and Silver is more critical than ever [Video]

Global financial markets are undergoing a profound transformation. In the latest episode of Live from the Vault, John Lee, CEO of Silver Elephant Mining Corp joins Andrew Maguire to examine how central bank digital currencies, programmable money, and digital ID systems are steadily eroding traditional notions of financial freedom. 

Youtube preview

Unlike past crises, today’s risks are not primarily inflation or interest rate movements-they stem from an increasing ability of governments and institutions to control money itself. This creates an urgent need for tangible assets that exist entirely outside digital oversight.

Silver poised for a historic breakout

Silver is entering a rare technical phase, one that could mark a generational opportunity for investors. Historical highs around $50 an ounce, seen in 1980 and 2011, are being challenged once more—but today’s conditions are markedly different. 

Supply remains constrained, global demand is rising, and the macro backdrop, including a rebounding Chinese economy and reflationary policies, supports further upside. Technical patterns suggest silver could surge to $85-$150, representing not speculation, but a revaluation in line with its fundamental scarcity and utility.

Gold’s acceleration and relative value

Gold has already demonstrated its role as a safe haven, breaking through previous ceilings and accelerating toward new highs. Yet silver remains undervalued relative to gold, signalling a rotation from one precious metal to the other. 

Beyond price movements, the shift is structural: markets are moving away from paper-based contracts toward physical settlement, where ownership of tangible bullion confers security, autonomy, and privacy.

The threat of digital control

Emerging financial technologies are not neutral. Central bank digital currencies, integrated digital IDs, and programmable money threaten to restrict spending, travel, and access to funds, effectively placing monetary freedom under centralised control. 

Historical experiments, from pandemic lockdowns to social credit systems in parts of Asia, demonstrate how easily technology can enforce compliance. In such an environment, physical gold and silver are no longer just investments—they are lifelines for preserving independence.

The flight to physical assets

Markets increasingly favour those close to monetary control, while ordinary citizens face tightening conditions. Billionaires and family offices are quietly stockpiling physical bullion, not for short-term gains, but to safeguard autonomy. For everyday investors, silver coins and gold bars represent financial sovereignty - a form of security that remains outside the reach of digital oversight or policy manipulation.

Strategic mining and critical materials

Investing in physical metals is only part of the story. Strategic exposure to mining companies, especially those producing silver, vanadium, and rare earths, offers additional leverage and security. These resources are increasingly vital for national security and high-tech industries, making them both scarce and strategically significant. Diversifying across jurisdictions mitigates geopolitical risk while maintaining exposure to essential materials underpinning the global economy.

Preserving financial sovereignty

John Lee’s central message is clear: financial freedom is under threat, and traditional paper-based assets may offer little protection. According to the seasoned expert, gold and silver remain the only reliable instruments to preserve wealth, liquidity, and autonomy in an increasingly digitised, controlled financial system.

Author

Samuel Briggs

Samuel Briggs

Kinesis Money

Samuel holds a deep understanding of the precious metals markets, and as an in-house journalist for 1:1 gold and silver-backed monetary system, Kinesis, he is chiefly responsible for updating the community with insights and analys

More from Samuel Briggs
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD flirts with daily highs, retargets 1.1900

EUR/USD regains upside traction, returning to the 1.1880 zone and refocusing its attention to the key 1.1900 barrier. The pair’s slight gains comes against the backdrop of a humble decline in the US Dollar as investors continue to assess the latest US CPI readings and the potential Fed’s rate path.

GBP/USD remains well bid around 1.3650

GBP/USD maintains its upside momentum in place, hovering around daily highs near 1.3650 and setting aside part of the recent three-day drop. Cable’s improved sentiment comes on the back of the Greenback’s  irresolute price action, while recent hawkish comments from the BoE’s Pill also collaborate with the uptick.

Gold clings to gains just above $5,000/oz

Gold is reclaiming part of the ground lost on Wednesday’s marked decline, as bargain-hunters keep piling up and lifting prices past the key $5,000 per troy ounce. The precious metal’s move higher is also underpinned by the slight pullback in the US Dollar and declining US Treasury yields across the curve.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP in choppy price action, weighed down by falling institutional interest 

Bitcoin's upside remains largely constrained amid weak technicals and declining institutional interest. Ethereum trades sideways above $1,900 support with the upside capped below $2,000 amid ETF outflows.

Week ahead – Data blitz, Fed Minutes and RBNZ decision in the spotlight

US GDP and PCE inflation are main highlights, plus the Fed minutes. UK and Japan have busy calendars too with focus on CPI. Flash PMIs for February will also be doing the rounds. RBNZ meets, is unlikely to follow RBA’s hawkish path.

Ripple Price Forecast: XRP potential bottom could be in sight

Ripple edges up above the intraday low of $1.35 at the time of writing on Friday amid mixed price actions across the crypto market. The remittance token failed to hold support at $1.40 the previous day, reflecting risk-off sentiment amid a decline in retail and institutional sentiment.