The $17,250 Gold Thesis: Why Pierre Lassonde Is Betting Big Now
Marcus ThorneBy Marcus Thorne
Finance
Jun 1, 2026 • 11:14 AM
10m10 min read
Verified
Source: Pexels
The Core Insight
Legendary resource investor Pierre Lassonde explains why the current global financial architecture, defined by record US debt, central bank diversification, and geopolitical shifts, is fueling a long-term gold bull market. He reiterates his $17,250 price target, draws parallels to the 1970s, and argues that mining equities are currently undervalued, offering massive margin expansion potential as the market shifts from paper exposure to physical control.
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Marcus Thorne
Marcus Thorne is a former Wall Street analyst and certified financial planner. He simplifies complex market trends and economic data for everyday readers.
The Kodawire Editorial Team consists of experienced journalists and subject matter experts dedicated to delivering accurate, well-researched, and engaging content.
The 1970s Playbook: Why History Favors Gold in 2026
What You Need to Know
The 1970s Parallel: We are witnessing a structural repeat of the 1976–1980 inflationary cycle, where gold serves as the ultimate hedge against currency debasement.
The $17,250 Target: Based on the Dow-to-Gold ratio, gold remains fundamentally undervalued, with current price action merely the beginning of a long-term shift in global financial architecture.
Central Bank Dominance: With central banks absorbing nearly 50% of annual gold production, the metal is transitioning from a commodity trade to a vote on US fiscal credibility.
The "Nirvana" Asset: Copper-gold deposits are the premier investment class for the next decade, combining monetary protection with the industrial demand required for the global energy transition.
History rarely repeats itself with perfect precision, but human behavior remains remarkably consistent. We are navigating an economic environment that mirrors the late 1970s, a period defined by persistent inflation, rising interest rates, and a fundamental loss of faith in the purchasing power of the dollar. With gold holding firmly above $4,700 per ounce, many investors are paralyzed by the "wall of worry," fearing that the move is overextended. However, a deeper look at the global financial architecture suggests that we are not at the end of a cycle, but rather in the early stages of a structural reset. To build a resilient portfolio, one must adopt boring habits that build wealth rather than chasing speculative trends.
Why You Can Trust This Analysis
My research into this sector involves a rigorous examination of historical market cycles, sovereign debt trajectories, and the shifting mechanics of physical gold demand. I have cross-referenced current central bank acquisition data with historical inflationary periods to validate the "1970s playbook" thesis. By analyzing the capital allocation strategies of major mining executives and the evolving role of the Shanghai Gold Exchange, I have synthesized a view that moves beyond the daily noise of the spot market to focus on the long-term structural drivers of the gold price.
The Death of the Dollar Reserve System
For decades, the US dollar has functioned as the world’s primary reserve currency. However, the weaponization of the financial system has forced a pivot. Nations are increasingly seeking alternatives to the SWIFT system, creating parallel payment structures that bypass traditional US-led financial architecture. This is not merely a geopolitical maneuver; it is a survival strategy. When countries settle oil trades in yuan, they are signaling a departure from dollar dependency.
Central banks are increasingly anchoring their currencies to physical gold reserves. (Credit: Sergei Starostin via Pexels)
Gold is the natural beneficiary of this shift. Central banks are no longer just diversifying their reserves; they are actively anchoring their currencies to hard assets. Last year, central banks purchased nearly 50% of the 3,800 tons of gold produced globally. This is a profound change from the era when gold represented less than 10% of central bank reserves. As the dollar’s share of global reserves continues to decline, gold is reclaiming its role as the currency of last resort. Understanding these macro shifts is essential, much like learning the 50-point entrepreneurial roadmap for long-term success.
The Risks You Need to Know
Investors must be wary of the "casino-style" volatility emerging from the Shanghai Gold Exchange. As price discovery migrates eastward, we are seeing more aggressive, concerted movements in the physical market. Furthermore, the US fiscal position, with interest payments on a $40 trillion debt load now exceeding $1 trillion annually, creates a precarious environment. If a major recession forces a liquidity crunch, even high-quality assets can face short-term pressure. Always maintain a long-term horizon; this is a marathon, not a sprint.
Mining Equities: The Undervalued Opportunity
While the price of gold has surged, many mining equities have yet to fully reflect the underlying value of their reserves. In the 1970s, mining stocks provided massive leverage to the gold price. Today, we are seeing a new era of management discipline. Unlike the "growth at all costs" mentality that plagued the industry in previous decades, modern CEOs are prioritizing dividends, share buybacks, and internal growth.
Modern mining companies are prioritizing operational efficiency and shareholder returns. (Credit: Tom Fisk via Pexels)
Companies like Orla Mining are setting the standard. By focusing on jurisdictional diversification and minimizing dilution, these firms are creating genuine value per share. When you consider that mining margins are currently around $3,000 per ounce, the potential for expansion if gold reaches $7,000 or even $17,000 is staggering. None of this upside is currently priced into the market. Investors should also be mindful of hidden tax strategies that can impact the net returns of these resource-heavy portfolios.
Consider the math of a gold miner with an all-in sustaining cost (AISC) of $1,600 per ounce. At a gold price of $4,600, the margin is $3,000. If the gold price doubles to $9,200, the margin doesn't just double, it triples to $7,600. This operating leverage is the "Golden Halo" that investors often overlook. When management teams use this surplus cash to pay dividends rather than chasing overpriced acquisitions, the compounding effect on shareholder returns is significant.
The Strategic Case for Copper-Gold Deposits
If you are looking for the "nirvana" of the mining sector, look for copper-gold deposits. The global energy transition requires a massive expansion of electrical grids, and copper is the most efficient conductor for this purpose. We are looking at a future where terminal energy consumption shifts from 80% carbon-based to 80% electricity-based. This creates a permanent, structural demand for copper.
Copper-gold deposits are essential for the global energy transition. (Credit: Malcoln Oliveira via Pexels)
Combining this industrial demand with the monetary protection of gold creates an asset class that is resilient across all economic cycles. These projects often have lifespans of 50 to 100 years, offering a level of longevity that single-commodity mines simply cannot match.
The Unpopular Opinion
Most investors believe that gold mining is a "commodity trade" that fluctuates with the business cycle. I disagree. In the current environment, gold mining is a defensive play on the failure of fiscal policy. The common belief that you should avoid miners because of "operational risk" ignores the fact that the best-run companies are now more disciplined than the average tech firm. If you aren't holding exposure to the producers, you are missing the most significant wealth-transfer event of the decade.
The Silent Wealth Killer
The biggest trap for investors today is the "fictional markup" of private equity and the lack of domestic investment by major pension funds. In Canada, for example, the "Maple 8" pension funds have largely ignored the domestic resource sector, opting for global diversification that often yields lower returns than a focused domestic strategy. Furthermore, the lack of "franking dividends", a tax structure that allows shareholders to receive dividends tax-free after the company has paid corporate tax, is a form of double taxation that discourages local capital formation. Ignoring these structural tax disadvantages is a silent killer of long-term wealth.
Canada’s Resource Dilemma: A Call for Reform
Canada possesses one of the world’s largest mineral endowments, yet it remains a difficult place to build a mine. Permitting timelines have ballooned from two years to seven years, creating what can only be described as "killing fields" for capital. If a project is worth $10 billion but takes a decade to permit, the discounted present value approaches zero. To remain competitive, Canada must cut red tape and encourage pension funds to invest in the very resources that drive the national economy.
My Recommended Setup
When building a portfolio for this cycle, I focus on three categories:
Senior Producers: Companies with established cash flow, disciplined management, and a history of returning capital via dividends.
Copper-Gold Developers: Firms with long-life assets that provide exposure to both the energy transition and monetary hedging.
Royalty & Streaming Companies: These provide the best of both worlds, exposure to the upside of gold price increases without the operational risks of mine construction.
If you want maximum safety: Focus on physical gold and royalty companies.
If you want maximum leverage: Look for intermediate producers with "Golden Halo" management teams and large land positions.
If you want industrial growth: Target copper-gold projects that are essential for the 2030 energy grid.
Your Turn
We are witnessing a fundamental shift in how the world values money and resources. As the Shanghai Gold Exchange continues to influence price discovery and central banks move away from the dollar, the "wall of worry" is only going to get higher. I will be in the comments for the next 24 hours to answer your questions about specific mining sectors and the macro outlook. What do you think is the biggest risk to the current gold bull market?
The current economic environment mirrors the 1970s inflationary cycle, characterized by rising interest rates and a loss of faith in the dollar's purchasing power, which historically makes gold an effective hedge.
Central banks are increasingly moving away from the US dollar and have been purchasing nearly 50% of annual global gold production to anchor their currencies to hard assets.
They combine the monetary protection of gold with the structural industrial demand for copper, which is essential for the global energy transition toward electricity-based consumption.
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Editorial Team • Question of the Day
"Do you believe the shift toward the Shanghai Gold Exchange will ultimately stabilize the gold market or lead to a period of unprecedented volatility?"