When CIBC — one of Canada’s largest banks — says gold could average $6,000 an ounce, that’s not a Reddit thread or a YouTube influencer talking. That’s institutional money admitting something most politicians and TV pundits refuse to say:
The old system is wobbling.
CIBC didn’t just nudge their forecast higher. They raised it sharply, from $4,500 to $6,000, and expect even higher prices later in the decade. Silver, they say, could average $105 this year and $120 next year.
That kind of move doesn’t happen in a healthy, stable monetary system. It happens when trust is breaking down.
Here’s the part that matters most to regular folks trying to protect their savings.
CIBC openly acknowledges that U.S. Treasuries are no longer viewed as risk-free. Let that sink in. For decades, Treasuries were the bedrock of the global financial system. The ultimate “safe” asset.
Now? Even big money is looking for the exits.
When the safest paper asset on Earth is questioned, investors don’t run to more paper. They run to things that can’t be printed, frozen, or digitally adjusted overnight.
That’s gold. That’s silver.
CIBC uses language that would’ve been unthinkable from a major bank just a few years ago:
This isn’t conspiracy talk. It’s math.
When debt-to-GDP ratios are near record highs, politicians have two options:
They always choose Door #2.
And inflation — real inflation, not the sanitized CPI version — is a direct tax on your savings.
The article points to market jitters around a possible Fed leadership change. Different name, same box.
CIBC believes rates will ultimately come down in 2026, regardless of who’s in charge. Why? Because the system can’t survive high rates with this much debt.
That’s the trap:
Either way, paper loses.
Gold and silver thrive not because policymakers are dumb — but because they’re cornered.
Gold gets the headlines, but silver is the sleeper that scares me the most — in a good way if you own it, and a bad way if you don’t.
Silver is:
When confidence cracks, silver doesn’t move politely. It gaps higher. And when it runs, it tends to outrun gold on a percentage basis.
CIBC projecting triple-digit silver should be a flashing warning light, not a footnote.
I didn’t grow up with hedge funds and offshore accounts. I grew up around people who worked hard, saved what they could, and trusted the system to play fair.
That trust has been abused.
When banks start sounding like gold bugs, it’s not because they suddenly found religion. It’s because they see the exits closing — and they don’t intend to be last in line.
Every currency reset, every “temporary” banking measure, every emergency rule is sold as protection. It never is. It’s protection for the system — not for you.
CIBC’s forecast isn’t radical. If anything, it’s conservative given the scale of the debt, the geopolitical mess, and the desperation of central banks.
Gold at $6,000 isn’t the story.
Why gold needs to be $6,000 is the story.
If you’re still entirely dependent on digits in a system you don’t control, you’re trusting people who’ve already shown you exactly who they are.
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.
Click here to get it
Your future self will thank you.
Or curse you — depending on whether you act now.
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