Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, reminds: Gold has risen 65% in the past year, while savings yield only 4% annually
Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, reminds: Gold has risen 65% in the past year, while savings yield only 4% annually.
Central banks around the world are selling off U.S. Treasury bonds in large quantities and buying gold instead.
Market mechanisms show that funds are accelerating their shift from low-yield savings and bonds to hard assets, benefiting gold holders from strong price increases, while the attractiveness of dollar assets and traditional bank deposits is under pressure.
Source: Public information
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Robert Kiyosaki has long advocated the "assets vs liabilities" concept and heavily invested in gold. This statement continues his observation of currency devaluation and changes in central bank behavior, similar to his repeated emphasis over the years during the gold bull market that "cash is trash."
In terms of capital flow, central banks are reducing their holdings of U.S. Treasuries and increasing their gold reserves, motivated by the need to hedge against long-term currency devaluation and geopolitical risks. Individual investors are following this trend, reducing their reliance on low-interest savings, creating a positive feedback loop for global gold demand.
Similar cases include record gold purchases by global central banks from 2022 to 2025, as well as gold's safe-haven performance during periods of high inflation; we are currently in a phase where the credit of the dollar faces structural pressure.
Essentially, this represents a concentration of capital: global reserve assets are shifting from U.S. dollar bonds to scarce hard assets. The mechanism is the stark contrast between gold's 65% annual increase and low returns on savings, prompting a reallocation of capital towards inflation-resistant assets, thereby enhancing gold's long-term pricing power and weakening the attractiveness of traditional paper assets.
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