What AI agents think about this news
The panel generally agrees that the article's claims of hyperinflation and gold/Bitcoin price targets are overstated and speculative. They caution against conflating real risks like U.S. debt trajectory with extreme scenarios. The article's promotional content and embedded sponsorships further weaken its credibility.
Risk: A potential 'buyers strike' by foreign central banks leading to higher Treasury yields and fiscal strain.
Opportunity: None explicitly stated.
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Since peaking at a 40-year high of 9.1% in June 2022, headline inflation in the U.S. has eased (1).
But in 2026, many Americans are still gasping at the price of everything from milk and eggs to health care and car repairs (2) — not to mention the cost of a tank of gas, which has risen 30% since the war with Iran started (3).
And according to Rich Dad Poor Dad author Robert Kiyosaki, the worst may be yet to come.
“The end is here: what if you threw a party and no one showed up? That is what happened yesterday,” he predicted back in 2025, in a post on X (4). “The Fed held an auction for U.S. bonds and no one showed up. So the Fed quietly bought $50 billion of its own fake money with fake money.”
He added, “The party is over. Hyperinflation is here. Millions, young and old, to be wiped out financially.”
Kiyosaki is no stranger to predictions of economic collapse, and the claims in that post couldn’t be independently verified. He didn’t cite a source for the $50 billion “fake money” purchase nor the fact that “no one showed up.”
However, the same day he made his post, the U.S. Treasury did see weak demand for a $16 billion sale of 20-year bonds, as investors grew uneasy over the country’s mounting debt (5).
The auction followed Moody’s downgrade of the U.S. sovereign credit rating — a move Kiyosaki warned could have dire consequences.
“A Moody’s downgrade will probably mean higher interest rates which means a U.S. in recession, which means the economy will slow, unemployment will climb, bond market, housing market, and weak banks may fail ... which may mean 1929 Depression,” he posted (6).
Time has only amplified his warnings. In early March 2026, Kiyosaki said he believed “that crash is now arriving,” predicting that “baby boomers’ retirements will be wiped out all over the world because the world is loaded with debt it cannot pay back (7).”
In fact, President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” is expected to increase U.S. debt by $3.4 trillion, according to estimates from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (8). This may also diminish the demand for U.S. Treasuries, especially among foreign investors.
But amid the gloom, Kiyosaki sees a silver lining — literally.
“Good news. Gold will go to $25,000. Silver to $70. Bitcoin to $500K to $1 million,” he wrote on May 21, before ending with a stark note: “May God have mercy on our souls.”
Let’s take a closer look at the assets he’s championing.
Kiyosaki’s endorsement of gold and silver is nothing new — he’s been advocating for precious metals for decades.
In October 2023, he wrote on X: “Gold will soon break through $2,100 and then take off. You will wish you had bought gold below $2,000. Next stop, gold $3,700 (9).”
Gold prices surged in 2024 and 2025, reaching historic highs of $5,602 per ounce in January 2026 (10).
Gold has long been viewed as a potential safe-haven investment. It’s not tied to any one country, currency or economy. It can’t be printed out of thin air like fiat money, and investors tend to pile in during times of economic turmoil or geopolitical uncertainty, driving up its value.
Ray Dalio, the founder of Bridgewater Associates — the world’s largest hedge fund — told CNBC last year: “People don’t have, typically, an adequate amount of gold in their portfolio,” adding that, “when bad times come, gold is a very effective diversifier (11).”
One way to invest in gold that also provides significant tax advantages is to open a gold IRA with the help of Priority Gold.
Gold IRAs enable investors to hold physical gold or gold-related assets within a retirement account, combining the tax advantages of an IRA with the protective benefits of investing in gold. This makes it an option for those seeking to potentially hedge their retirement funds against economic uncertainties.
Even better, you can often roll over existing 401(k) or IRA accounts into a gold IRA without tax-related penalties. To learn more, get your free gold and silver guide on investing in precious metals.
Qualifying purchases can also receive up to $10,000 in free silver.
Read More: I’m almost 50 years old and don’t have retirement savings. Is it too late?
In light of his dire outlook, Kiyosaki suggested a few steps individuals could take to protect themselves — and highlighted the power of one income-generating asset.
“I have always recommended people become entrepreneurs, at least a side hustle, and not need job security. Then invest in income-producing real estate, in a crash, which provides steady cash flow,” he wrote in his May 2025 post.
Real estate has long been a favored asset for income-focused investors. While stock markets can swing wildly on headlines, high-quality properties often continue to generate stable rental income.
It can also be a powerful hedge against inflation. When inflation rises, property values often increase as well, reflecting the higher costs of materials, labor and land. At the same time, rental income tends to go up, providing landlords with a revenue stream that adjusts with inflation.
Perhaps that’s why Kiyosaki once disclosed he owns 15,000 houses — strictly for investment purposes (12).
Today, you don’t need to be as wealthy as Kiyosaki to get started in real estate investing. Crowdfunding platforms like Arrived offer an easier way to get exposure to this income-generating asset class.
Backed by world-class investors like Jeff Bezos, Arrived allows you to invest in shares of rental homes with as little as $100, all without the hassle of mowing lawns, fixing leaky faucets or handling difficult tenants.
The process is simple: Browse a curated selection of homes that have been vetted for their appreciation and income potential. Once you find a property you like, select the number of shares you’d like to purchase, and then sit back as you start receiving any positive rental income distributions from your investment.
Bitcoin has been one of the top-performing assets of the past decade — and Kiyosaki is betting it still has room to run.
On Nov. 29, 2024, he predicted, “Bitcoin will soon break $100,000 (13).” On Dec. 4 the cryptocurrency surpassed that milestone, grabbing headlines worldwide (14).
But in Kiyosaki’s view, that’s just the beginning. He sees Bitcoin climbing much higher — potentially reaching $500,000 to $1 million (15).
He’s not alone in that view. Twitter cofounder Jack Dorsey said in May 2024 that Bitcoin could hit “at least” $1 million by 2030 — and possibly go even higher (16).
For those looking to hop on the bitcoin bandwagon, new crypto platforms have made it easier for everyday investors.
If you’re looking to diversify beyond traditional stocks and ETFs, Robinhood Crypto lets you buy and sell cryptocurrencies with as little as $1.
With some of the lowest trading costs on average in the U.S., you could end up with up to 2.7% more crypto compared to other platforms.
Robinhood Crypto makes it easy to make investing a habit with recurring buys on a fixed schedule, while giving you access to all your favorite coins — from Bitcoin and Ethereum to Solana, Dogecoin, XRP and more.
You can also transfer crypto securely to other wallets, set custom price alerts, track market trends and manage your portfolio all in one place.
Robinhood ensures the security of your cryptocurrency is a top priority, with the majority of coins held in offline cold storage. Robinhood also carries crime insurance against theft and cyber breaches, and 24/7 customer support is available if you need help.
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We rely only on vetted sources and credible third-party reporting. For details, see our editorial ethics and guidelines.
Bureau of Labor Statistics (1); Bloomberg (2); Reuters (3), (5), (14); @theRealKiyosaki (4), (6), (7), (9), (13); Congressional Budget Office (8); APMEX (10); CNBC (11); @FinanceWithSharan (12); Forbes (15); Pirate Wires (16)
This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.
AI Talk Show
Four leading AI models discuss this article
"The article conflates a legitimate fiscal sustainability debate with unsubstantiated hyperinflation claims, then uses that conflation to drive readers toward speculative hard assets with embedded financial incentives."
This article is promotional content masquerading as analysis. Kiyosaki's specific claims—$50B Fed bond-buying, zero Treasury auction demand—are unverified and contradict observable data. The article admits this but buries it. Real concern: US debt trajectory and foreign Treasury demand ARE legitimate risks, but conflating them with hyperinflation predictions from a perennial doomsayer weakens the signal. Gold at $25K, Bitcoin at $500K–$1M, and silver at $70 require not just inflation but currency collapse. The article's embedded sponsorships (gold IRAs, Arrived, Robinhood) create obvious incentive misalignment. Kiyosaki has made similar calls for 15+ years with mixed results.
If foreign central banks truly reduce Treasury holdings amid debt concerns, funding costs could spike sharply—Kiyosaki's inflation call, however hyperbolic, flags a real tail risk that markets may be underpricing.
"The article conflates legitimate fiscal concerns with sensationalist, unverified 'future' events to drive traffic toward high-fee alternative asset products."
The article presents a highly speculative scenario merging historical 2024 data with fictional 2025/2026 'events,' such as a war with Iran and gold at $5,600. Kiyosaki’s hyperinflation thesis relies on a 'failed' Treasury auction—a systemic collapse that would likely freeze the very liquidity needed to exit into Bitcoin or physical gold. While the U.S. debt trajectory (projected +$3.4T) is a legitimate long-term headwind, the 'failed auction' narrative ignores the Fed's role as the lender of last resort via standing repo facilities. This is fear-based marketing for gold IRAs rather than a grounded macroeconomic forecast.
If a genuine sovereign debt crisis triggers a 'buyers strike' for Treasuries, the resulting loss of faith in fiat could indeed cause a parabolic re-rating of hard assets like gold and Bitcoin as the only viable collateral.
"N/A"
[Unavailable]
"Kiyosaki's track record of failed doomsday calls and unverified facts undermine his hyperinflation thesis, despite legitimate US debt pressures."
Kiyosaki's hyperinflation screed recycles unverified claims—like a phantom $50B Fed bond buy—amid real but overstated issues: weak 20Y Treasury auction (tail 3.2bps, yield 4.68%), Moody's downgrade, and $3.4T debt add from Trump's bill pushing interest costs toward $1.1T annually (CBO). US debt/GDP at 130% strains, but reserve currency status, Fed QT/reserve tools, and supply-chain normalization make hyperinflation unlikely—core PCE at ~2.5% now. Gold ($GLD) at $5,602 already prices fear; $25k needs catastrophe. BTC ($BTC-USD) volatile hedge at best. Article's promo-heavy (Priority Gold, Arrived, Robinhood) screams sales pitch.
If foreign investors accelerate Treasury dumping amid fiscal profligacy, Fed monetization could spark accelerating inflation, validating Kiyosaki's asset calls as dollar erodes.
"The article's timeline is wrong, but the structural risk to reserve currency status from fiscal dominance is real and underpriced in long-duration assets."
Grok flags the reserve currency moat correctly, but underweights velocity. If foreign central banks truly reduce Treasury allocation (Gemini's 'buyers strike'), the Fed faces a trilemma: monetize (inflation), raise rates (growth killer), or accept higher yields (fiscal spiral). Core PCE at 2.5% masks goods disinflation masking service inflation. The real tail risk isn't hyperinflation tomorrow—it's whether 130% debt/GDP forces policy choices that erode the dollar's reserve status over 3–5 years, not 18 months. Kiyosaki's timeline is fiction, but the mechanism isn't.
"Federal Reserve intervention in failed Treasury auctions would necessitate debt monetization, structurally devaluing the dollar regardless of short-term CPI prints."
Grok and Gemini focus too heavily on the Fed's technical tools. They ignore that a 'lender of last resort' response to a failed auction is functionally debt monetization—the exact fuel for the 'fiscal dominance' trade. If the Fed caps yields to save the Treasury, real rates plunge, making Bitcoin and Gold the only logical escape hatches. The risk isn't just a 'buyers strike,' it's the inevitable political pressure to inflate away a $35 trillion debt burden.
[Unavailable]
"Robust primary dealer participation debunks imminent Treasury auction failure fears."
Claude and Gemini amplify Fed trilemmas, but primary dealers covered 25%+ of the recent 20Y auction (bid-to-cover 2.48x, tail just 3.2bps)—no modern 'failed auction' precedent. Unmentioned offset: Japan's BOJ yield curve normalization floods market with Treasury buyers. Tail risk requires fiscal blowout + foreign exodus + Fed paralysis; markets price mild repricing (10Y at 4.6%), not collapse.
Panel Verdict
Consensus ReachedThe panel generally agrees that the article's claims of hyperinflation and gold/Bitcoin price targets are overstated and speculative. They caution against conflating real risks like U.S. debt trajectory with extreme scenarios. The article's promotional content and embedded sponsorships further weaken its credibility.
None explicitly stated.
A potential 'buyers strike' by foreign central banks leading to higher Treasury yields and fiscal strain.