Gold’s gains are ‘historic and unnerving’ and represent ‘a deliberate recalibration of the global order’ – SPI’s Stephen Innes

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By Ernest Hoffman
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Gold’s gains are ‘historic and unnerving’ and represent ‘a deliberate recalibration of the global order’ – SPI’s Stephen Innes teaser image

(Kitco News) – Gold’s price gains are great news for precious metals investors, but the yellow metal’s surge toward $4,000 per ounce also reveals a degree of economic and geopolitical anxiety not seen since the late 1970s, according to Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management.

“Gold isn’t just climbing—it’s blazing a trail that feels both historic and unnerving,” Innes wrote on Wednesday. “Prices surged another 1% on Tuesday, pulling the $4,000 per ounce marker into clearer view, and extending a run that now sees the metal up 45% this year. In doing so, gold has vaulted past its old inflation-adjusted peak from 1980, scaling above every keen psychological resistance, and pressing higher into uncharted territory.”

Innes said the yellow metal’s momentum isn’t just about inflation. “If it were, the bond market would be sounding alarms with spiking long-dated yields and a steepening curve,” he said. “Instead, gold’s rise is feeding on a cocktail far stronger—central bank accumulation, capital flight from fiat currencies, and geopolitical hedging that reeks of systemic mistrust.”

“Not since the chaos of 1979, when investors gave up hope of taming inflation and gold more than doubled in a single year, have we seen such a ferocious and sustained charge,” he added. “But this isn’t just an inflation panic. Unlike 2011’s rally—fueled by QE-era fear of money printing—this move feels more calculated, more anchored in sovereign choices rather than retail frenzy.”

Innes said central banks themselves are driving today’s gold price rally. “Countries are deliberately diversifying away from the dollar, not out of mania, but from cold, strategic calculus,” he noted. “Beijing’s decision to open Shanghai as an alternative vault for official reserves is more symbolic than structural, yet it broadcasts a loud truth: any adjustment to the architecture of the global financial system carries with it an implicit bid for gold.”

And while skeptics point to the ongoing strength of U.S. equity markets and doubt gold’s ability to outpace the tech giants, Innes believes “the hidden scaffolding of both rallies” shows that it can.

“U.S. shares are flying not purely on fundamentals but on the steady drip of monetary debasement,” he wrote. “Last week’s Fed cut was hardly a surprise, but the Chair’s insistence that ‘there is no risk-free way forward’ underscores the fragility of the backdrop. Even as Powell tries to resist political pressure for more aggressive easing, investors sense that money supply is expanding again and fiat credibility is fraying at the edges. That’s why this isn’t just about traders chasing momentum—it’s about central banks, sovereign wealth funds, and long-horizon investors quietly shifting their compass toward hard collateral.”

“If 1979 was a firestorm of fear, and 2011 was a retail panic wrapped in QE doubt, then 2025 is shaping up as a deliberate recalibration of the global order,” Innes concluded. “The lesson from history is the same: ignore gold’s message at your peril.”

After rising to the edge of $3,800 per ounce on Tuesday morning and trading as high as $3,779.34 per ounce overnight, gold prices have continued to slide throughout the North American trading session.

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Spot gold last traded at $3,729.82 per ounce for a loss of 0.91% on the daily chart.

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Ernest Hoffman

Ernest Hoffman is a Crypto and Market Reporter for Kitco News. He has over 15 years of experience as a writer, editor, broadcaster and producer for media, educational and cultural organizations. Ernest began working in market news in 2007, establishing the broadcast division of CEP News in Montreal, Canada, where he developed the fastest web-based audio news service in the world and produced economic news videos in partnership with MSN and the TMX. He has a Bachelor's degree Specialization in Journalism from Concordia University. You can reach Ernest at 1-514-670-1339.

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