The Coming Collapse: Who Wins, Who Loses, And Who Gets Wiped Out
David Morgan and Lynette Zang argue that the current fiat system is weakening and that gold and silver remain key wealth-preservation assets, with both framing central-bank gold buying as evidence that official institutions are already hedging against monetary deterioration. Morgan also cautions that silver’s recent parabolic move is overbought and says investors should take partial profits when markets become overheated. A key market discussion centered on COMEX inventories. Zang suggested physical metal may be leaving the system as the public focuses on spot volatility, while Morgan pushed back that many reported COMEX “deliveries” are really paper ownership transfers and said registered inventory is the number to watch. The interview repeatedly emphasizes that gold and silver are not just trades but monetary insurance, with silver positioned as practical barter money and pre-1965 coins used as an example of real purchasing power. For traders, the actionable takeaway is that the bullish structural case for gold remains tied to distrust in fiat and central-bank accumulation, but silver may be vulnerable to a near-term correction after an extended run. The interview offers no hard flow data or price levels, so its value is more as sentiment/positioning color than as a trading signal. Near-term attention should stay on COMEX registered stocks, any continued central-bank buying, and whether silver momentum cools after the overbought run.