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Could gold really soar to $6,000 an ounce by the end of Trumpās second term? According to JPMorgan analysts, that scenario isnāt just possibleāitās increasingly probable.
In a bullish forecast, the bank argues that if just 0.5% of American-owned foreign assets are reallocated into gold, the price could more than double. That shiftāaround $273.6 billionāwould buy 2,500 metric tons of gold, enough to drive significant market movement given goldās relatively inelastic supply.
In fact, JPMorgan notes that just 3% of the total gold market changing hands could spike the price by over 80%. Itās a startling insight into how tight the gold market really isāand why the worldās largest bank remains structurally bullish on the metal through 2029.

Despite Trumpās recent trade ceasefire with China, gold prices remain strongāhovering above $3,200 per ounce. Thatās a sign of sustained investor demand, even in a cooling geopolitical climate.
JPMorgan isnāt alone in this call. Frank Holmes, CEO of U.S. Global Investors, shares a similar view. He predicts gold could hit $6,000 before 2029, citing the massive expansion in global money supply.
And what about Bitcoināthe so-called ādigital goldā? Holmes sees it climbing to $150,000, even $250,000, in the same time frame. But here’s where things get interesting.
If 3% of goldās market turnover can move the price by 80%, why doesnāt Bitcoināwhere 4% trades hands daily on centralized exchangesāmove that much?
The answer lies in market structure.
Goldās physical supply is overwhelmed by paper goldāover 3,000 kg of derivatives for every 1 kg of real metal. Itās a heavily manipulated market. Bitcoin, for now, remains more transparent. But the moment Wall Street develops a full suite of Bitcoin derivatives, we may see similar price suppression mechanisms at play.
In other words, Bitcoinās future could look a lot like goldās pastāif the financial system has its way. But until then, both assetsāreal and digitalāremain top hedges in a world of fiat uncertainty.