They revealed the fragility — and the hope — of how people store both wealth and trust.… In the winter of 2026, when global markets seemed to breathe uncertainty more than certainty, Kaori watched the faint glow of sunlight hit her small stack of gold coins — a gift from her grandfather. Once, gold and silver had been distant abstractions: shiny metals in jewelry stores, relics in history books. Now they were symbols of stability in a shaking world. Economic headlines had been relentless: gold had repeatedly soared to historic highs — crossing $5,600 per ounce as investors threw cash into perceived safe havens amid geopolitical strains and policy unpredictability. Central banks and retail buyers had poured into precious metals, pushing prices to levels that even veteran analysts called unprecedented. At a Tokyo café, Kaori overheard traders debating the morning’s shock: a sudden plunge in gold and silver prices after news that a major ce...