So Wall Street finally woke up. For years we watched this play out—central banks printing, debt exploding, and crypto people saying fiat has no floor. Now every major bank is basically admitting the same thing with their gold and silver price predictions for 2026. JPMorgan's calling for gold at 6,300, UBS at 6,200 (or 7,200 in their bull case), Wells Fargo 6,100–6,300, Deutsche Bank 6,000. Even Goldman Sachs, the most conservative, sees 5,400. That's all pointing the same direction. Gold sitting at 4,614 right now means we're talking 30% minimum from here if these targets hit. For silver, it gets wilder. Bank of America is throwing out 135 to 309, Citigroup at 150. I know the high end sounds crazy—that's like 4x from current levels. But even their conservative 135 is a clean double from 75. And honestly? Silver's got actual use cases. Solar panels, EVs, AI hardware. That's not speculation. The thing that gets me is how uniform the message is. You don't see banks this far apart on price targets unless they're reading the same macro script. Currency erosion, gold buying by central banks, industrial demand—this isn't some fringe thesis anymore. Looking at the technicals, gold's holding above the 200-day moving average at 4,288, currently consolidating between 4,600 and 4,650. RSI is neutral at 48.89, so there's room to run. A clean break above 4,650 could open 4,800 and 5,000. Silver's more interesting because it already had that explosive move from 40 to 130 in 2025, then corrected hard to 75. That 75 level keeps getting defended—buyers keep showing up. If silver price prediction models hold and we see a break above 100, that confirms a new leg. But right now it's coiling. The macro story is crystal clear though. This isn't about expensive commodities. It's about what happens when fiat loses credibility. Wall Street finally caught up to what we've known.

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