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Robert Kiyosaki — the ever-provocative Rich Dad Poor Dad author — is back at it, calling the end of not just the U.S. dollar, but the financial playbook that's anchored generations of retirement portfolios. "The BS of 60/40 is dead," he posted, referring to the traditional mix of 60% stocks and 40% bonds that financial planners have long sold as a safe path to retirement.
His argument? The dollar is "fake," bonds are "IOUs from a bankrupt government," and that anyone still saving in fiat is "a loser."
The 60/40 model has been creaky for years — hurt by inflation, low bond yields, and volatile equities. Now, even the big banks are bending to Kiyosaki's view. Morgan Stanley recently floated a 60/20/20 allocation — 60% equities, 20% bonds, and 20% gold — a tacit admission that diversification might need to include tangible assets again.
Gold's long-term outperformance versus both stocks and Treasuries gives the shift some credibility, especially as geopolitical risk and fiscal deficits keep pressure on fiat currencies.
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For Kiyosaki, though, gold is just the beginning. He's stacking gold, silver, Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC), and Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) plus old-school cash-flow assets like rental real estate, oil wells, and even cattle.
The theme is consistent: own what's real, not what's printed. While his rhetoric about a "bankrupt U.S. government controlled by a Marxist Fed" plays to the extremes, the message resonates with investors losing faith in paper promises and passive portfolios.
Love him or roll your eyes, Kiyosaki's alarm bell rings at a moment when even institutions are quietly rotating toward hard assets. Whether it's gold-backed ETFs like the SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE:GLD), Bitcoin spot funds like the iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (NASDAQ:IBIT), or tokenized real estate, the "fake dollar" trade is creeping from fringe to front page. Investors tracking the U.S. dollar via the Invesco DB USD Index Bullish Fund ETF (NYSE:UUP) should remain wary of their holdings.
The question isn't whether 60/40 is dead…it's how long investors can afford to ignore the obituary.
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