When gold and copper are both hitting record highs at the same time, it’s a warning sign. Gold usually rises when people lose trust in money and governments are printing too much of it. Copper usually rises when the real economy is booming and lots of things are being built. Seeing both surge together tells us something unusual is happening: governments are spending and borrowing heavily, pushing up the price of real materials, while ordinary people are quietly losing purchasing power as the value of money is diluted. Asset prices go up, but wages don’t keep pace. That’s why everything feels more expensive even when politicians say the economy is “strong.” It’s not prosperity; it’s currency debasement colliding with real-world shortages, and 2026 is shaping up to expose that contradiction.




















