$5,000 Gold by 2026? Wall Street Insider Confirms What We’ve Been Warning About All Along
Wall Street’s Finally Catching Up: $5,000 Gold Is on the Table
For years now, folks like us—working people, small business owners, retirees just trying to hang onto what we’ve earned—we’ve been called “doomers” for owning gold and silver. But now, here comes Aakash Doshi, Head of Gold Strategy at State Street, one of the biggest investment firms in the world, telling Kitco News that gold has a 40% chance of hitting $5,000/oz by late 2026. That’s on the heels of a blistering run: gold climbed over 60% in 2025, its best performance in decades, driven by inflation fears, geopolitical risk, and record inflows into gold ETFs. In this environment of persistent market stress and shifting investor priorities, the economic uncertainty gold price outlook has become a central theme for savers and wealth‑preservers alike.
That’s no small prediction. But here’s what matters more: his reasoning is exactly what we’ve been shouting from the rooftops.
"Consolidation Doesn’t Break the Bull Run" — And He’s Right
Doshi starts off by saying that gold’s price might experience some ups and downs in the short term—maybe even a flat month or two—but that doesn’t mean the rally’s over. According to him, these brief pauses are just profit-taking and consolidation, not signs of weakness.
That’s classic bull market behavior. Remember, no asset goes up in a straight line, especially one as heavily manipulated and watched as gold. But the long-term trajectory? Still pointing up—and that’s what really matters.
Equities at Highs? That’s Good for Gold?
Now here’s something interesting: Doshi says gold’s strength isn’t diminished by the stock market also being at record highs. In fact, he argues that when both gold and equities are flying, it confirms gold’s role as a structural portfolio hedge, not just a fear-based trade.
I agree—up to a point. Yes, gold can thrive in bull markets, but what we’re seeing now isn’t a healthy bull. It’s a liquidity-fueled sugar high, driven by record government spending and reckless central bank policy. Eventually, something’s gotta give. When it does, gold won’t just be a hedge—it’ll be a lifeboat.
Tail Risks: The Elephant in the Room
Doshi also talks about something that doesn't get enough airtime in mainstream financial media: tail risks.
Tail risks are those “unthinkable” events that seem far-fetched—until they happen. Wars. Currency crises. Debt defaults. Total political instability. Sound familiar?
He’s not just talking about noise here. He’s pointing to structural regime shifts—the kind that can wipe out portfolios overnight if you're not prepared. And guess what performs during tail-risk events?
Gold. And silver. Every time.
Debt, Deficits, and Central Bank Insanity
The article highlights that government and corporate debt hit record highs in 2025—and they're still climbing. The U.S. is drowning in deficits, and nobody in D.C. seems to care. You can’t run trillion-dollar deficits and pretend everything’s fine.
Meanwhile, central banks around the world—especially outside the U.S.—are snapping up gold hand over fist. Doshi says this demand is now price-inelastic, meaning they’ll keep buying no matter the price.
Why? Because they know what’s coming. They’re preparing for a post-dollar world, and gold is their ticket out of it.
Inflation Isn’t Going Away—It’s Just “Stabilizing”
One of the more telling quotes from Doshi is this:
“I wouldn’t call it disinflation... I’d call it inflation stabilizing. We’re above target, but we’re not getting upside surprises either.”
Translation? The Fed hasn’t fixed inflation. They’ve just gotten used to it.
We’re being slowly boiled alive with 3%–4% annual inflation, and they’re calling it “stable.” But remember—compounding inflation destroys purchasing power over time. Your dollar still buys less than it did last year, and a whole lot less than it did five years ago.
That’s why I always say: owning fiat currency is like owning a car that loses value every time you turn the key.
What If the Fed Just... Pauses?
Doshi believes the Fed will likely stay on hold into 2026, unless the job market falls apart. And guess what? That’s just fine for gold.
He’s right again here. History shows gold does well during rate pauses, especially when the market expects cuts later. And when the Fed does eventually pivot—and they will—that’s when gold could blow past $5,000 like a freight train.
ETF Inflows and Physical Demand: This Market’s Not Done Yet
According to State Street, gold ETFs had record inflows in 2025, which defied typical year-end weakness. That’s a strong signal that both retail and institutional demand are on the rise, and there’s still a lot of room to grow.
Doshi even says global allocation to gold is still relatively low. That means we haven’t seen the full potential of this bull run—not even close.
And let’s not forget: physical demand remains red-hot, especially from central banks and emerging markets. That’s the real story. Paper gold can be manipulated, but physical demand sets the foundation.
My Take: This Isn’t a Forecast—It’s a Warning
Look, I appreciate Doshi being honest. But let’s be clear: he’s not sounding the alarm—he’s just adjusting the forecast.
Meanwhile, here at Dedollarize, we’ve been telling you for years that the system is unsustainable. We’ve warned about central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), mass surveillance, the hollowing out of the middle class, and the death of real savings.
What Wall Street calls a "tail risk" is what we call inevitable.
And while they’re playing catch-up, you still have time to protect yourself—but that window is closing fast.
Call to Action: Arm Yourself Before the Collapse
Don’t wait for the next "bank holiday" or currency reset to realize you’ve been had.
Get physical. Get secure. And get educated — because they’re not going to warn you when it all goes down.
Download "Digital Dollar Reset Guide" now.
Your future self will thank you. Or curse you — depending on whether you act now.




