Perhaps this is why the western Central Banks are so determined to prevent the price of gold from breaking out, and keep putting out disinformation from within a cloak of secrecy about their inflationary policies and money creation.
Negative real interest rates are very bullish for gold, and highly corrosive to the ordinary savings of those who lack the sophisticated financial instruments to otherwise protect themselves.
...Negative real interest rates occur when the inflationary rate, or CPI, is greater than the current interest rate. A quick account of the G-7 and E-7 countries shows that the majority have negative real interest rates.
Across the developed G-7 countries, British citizens are the worst off with real interest rates in the U.K. sitting at negative 4.5 percent. U.S investors aren’t doing much better with rates at negative 3.25 percent and the Fed has all but guaranteed rates will remain there. Only Japan has a positive real interest rate among the G-7 and that rate is barely above zero.
Conversely, the most populous nations making up the E-7 have mostly positive real interest rates. However, the grouping’s grandest economic powerhouses, China and India, have negative real interest rates sitting around negative 2 percent.
Frank Holmes, Central Bank Appetite And The Monetary Case For $10,000 Gold, Forbes