In a development that has sent shivers down the spines of every central banker, suits in the City of London are reportedly stockpiling gold bars like anxious preppers hoarding tinned beans before a nuclear winter. Yes, the shimmering, alchemical metal that once backed every pound note is making a comeback, and the men who control the printing presses are terrified.
Let us be clear: this is not your grandfather's gold standard. This is a feverish, paranoid accumulation by the very institutions that swore off the yellow stuff decades ago. The Bank of England, the People's Bank of China, even the Federal Reserve (though they'll deny it over a dry martini) are building vaults so heavy they threaten to sink the City of London into the Thames. Why? Because they know the game is up.
The game, dear reader, is the grand illusion of fiat money. That crisp tenner in your pocket is worth nothing but the ink it's printed with, backed only by the vague promise that the government will accept it for taxes. And now, with inflation gnawing at the edges of the empire like a hungry rat, the central bankers have realised their paper castles are built on sand. Or, more accurately, on debt.
So they turn to gold. The barbarous relic, as Keynes called it. But Keynes was a man who never had to explain why his life savings were now worth a loaf of bread. Gold is honest; it does not lie. You cannot print more of it. You cannot invent it with a keystroke. It sits in the ground, stubborn and heavy, and when you dig it up and hold it in your hand, it whispers: 'I am real. Your bank balance is not.'
And now the suits are hoarding it. Not for jewellery or for industry, but as a panic button. They look at the mountains of government debt, the rising tide of digital currencies, and the spectre of hyperinflation, and they remember that every fiat currency in history has eventually returned to its intrinsic value: zero.
So what does this mean for you, the common man? It means that the very people who told you gold is a pointless, volatile asset are now buying it by the truckload. It means the next financial crisis will not be a stampede to the bank, but a scramble for the vaults. And it means that if you find yourself clutching a wad of notes while the world burns, you will understand the bitter irony of a system that trusted paper over metal.
But let us not be too grim. There is a comedy in all this. Watch the central bankers, their faces ashen, as they explain that gold is not a currency, not a store of value, just a 'reserve asset' to calm the markets. Watch them wink and nod while they stuff their own mattresses with bullion. It is the greatest political theatre since a prime minister claimed his policies were working.
So raise a glass of airport gin to the return of the gold standard. It may not be official, it may not be printed in the textbooks, but the hoarding is real. And when the paper falls apart, as it surely will, we will all be left holding bars of yellow truth. Or, more likely, standing in a queue outside a pawn shop, wondering where it all went wrong.
Until then, keep your receipts and your wits. The suits are betting on gold, and if that doesn't tell you everything you need to know about the state of the economy, nothing will.








