Revaluation Isn’t a Myth—It’s a Tool the Fed Just Acknowledged For decades, the statutory price of gold in the U.S. Treasury’s books has sat frozen at $42.22 an ounce. Meanwhile, the market laughs—spot gold has hovered above $2,000 and recently breached the $3,300 mark. That gap isn’t just a rounding error. It’s a nuclear discrepancy—one that’s been quietly acknowledged in a recent whitepaper from the Federal Reserve’s own staff economists. The document reviews how other nations have revalued their gold reserves to paper over fiscal holes, adjust sovereign balance sheets, or manipulate monetary optics. But here’s the kicker: they now openly discuss how such a revaluation could work in the U.S. context. They even state—without blinking—that $3,300+ is the market…
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