| The most heavily levered nations include some of the world’s most developed economies, such as the United Kingdom and Japan, which have printed massive amounts of money relative to their sovereign gold holdings. “In a reset scenario, their currencies would be under the most pressure,” they wrote. “For example, Japan’s implied gold price for M2 is roughly $301,000 per ounce, while the UK’s is roughly $428,000.”
VanEck’s baseline group includes the United States and the Eurozone. “The US implied M2 price is roughly $85,000, while the Eurozone is around $53,000,” the analysts noted.
The third group – the solvent – includes developing economies with large gold holdings relative to their M0 and M1 money supplies. “Emerging Markets like Russia and Kazakhstan arguably have enough gold to back their money supplies at much lower valuations,” they said. “This highlights a shift where certain Emerging Markets are becoming more fiscally defensive than their Developed counterparts.”
Far from an academic exercise, VanEck wrote that these calculations truly matter in 2026 – because the world has definitively entered into an era of fiscal dominance.
“Developed markets are struggling with high government debt, forcing central banks to ‘print’ more money to keep the system liquid,” they said. “As the pile of paper money grows toward infinity, the value of the finite asset, gold, must theoretically rise to keep up.”
The Emerging Markets Bond team was careful to point out that they do not expect the U.S. dollar to “suddenly lose its status as a reserve currency.” Rather, they see a gradual evolution “toward a multipolar world in which the dollar shares that role with gold and the bonds of fiscally disciplined emerging markets.”
* VanEck is a New York-based asset manager founded in 1955, known for pioneering investments in gold, emerging markets, and ETFs. With $181 billion under management.
Conclusion: Having investment assets properly allocated to gold now, provides essential Financial Insurance from: Asset bubbles, stock market declines, global unrest and currency debasement.
Unlike a currency, gold can’t be inflated away. Unlike a bond, gold can’t default. And unlike a company (stock) gold can’t go bankrupt.
In 2026 the stock, bond & real estate bubbles may burst. While money in the bank becomes worth less every day. (inflation) But gold will continue to protect and grow savings as it has for 5,000 years.
“During the inflationary 1970’s bull market, gold soared 2,300%. And in the 2001 to 2011 bull market, gold surged 646%. Assuming the current bull market rise is similar, it means that gold could rise to as high as the $8,000 to $25,000 level in 2026/27” – Aden Forecast.
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