| Editor's Note: Please see this special opportunity event Addison is hosting with our affiliate at Rarcoa. I promise you won't want to miss what he's sharing. Details below. Good morning Reader,
Let me ask you something…
When confidence in institutions erodes — where does capital go?
Historically, it moves toward: - Hard assets
- Limited supply
- Independent stores of value
That includes precious metals.
But there’s a layer above bullion that few investors understand.
Rarity.
Take this example…
In 1776, when America declared independence, we didn’t mint our own coins yet. Instead, the colonies printed their own paper currency.
Benjamin Franklin himself printed currency for Delaware: Today, surviving examples from that era — printed by a Founding Father in the year of independence — are considered both historical artifacts and financial assets.
They’ve survived 250 years.
Try saying that about a modern Federal Reserve Note.
This Friday at 2pm ET, Wayde Milas and I will discuss why elite collectors and macro-minded investors are turning toward rare, historically significant coins and currency.
This isn’t speculation.
It’s about: - Supply that can never increase
- Demand that continues globally
- And tangible wealth outside digital ledgers
Join us live tomorrow at 2pm ET.  Addison Wiggin Founder, Grey Swan |
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