Gold prices have been volatile, but not disorderly. Movements can largely be explained by familiar forces: real interest rates, the strength of the dollar, expectations around monetary easing, and shifts in risk appetite. There is no evidence of empty vaults, failed settlements, or a breakdown in the mechanics of the gold market.
And yet, unease persists. Not because of price, but because of structure.
This distinction matters. It mattered acutely in Lebanon between 2019 and today, when depositors learned, too late, that money on a balance sheet is not the same as money in hand. The parallel with today’s gold market is not exact, but it is instructive.
When Assets Become Claims
Lebanon’s financial collapse is often described as a currency crisis. In reality, it was a crisis of convertibility.
Banks had created more dollar liabilities than they could honour in cash. As long as depositors accepted electronic balances as equivalent to physical dollars, the system functioned. Once that assumption broke, a new instrument emerged: the ‘lollar’, a dollar-denominated claim trading at a discount to actual dollars.
Nothing mystical occurred. Dollars did not vanish overnight. What disappeared was the ability to access them on demand.
Gold markets today rest on a similar, though vastly larger and more sophisticated, foundation.
Most exposure to gold is held not as bullion, but through futures contracts, exchange-traded funds, unallocated accounts and over-the-counter derivatives. These instruments are liquid, efficient and, under normal conditions, fit for purpose. But they are also claims on gold, not the metal itself.
The system works because market participants do not all ask the same question simultaneously: Can I take delivery?
Leverage and Volatility
Leverage plays a central role in this structure
It does not create physical demand; it creates financial amplification.
When prices move sharply, leveraged positions are forced to unwind. Margin calls trigger selling, liquidity evaporates and volatility increases. This dynamic explains much of gold’s recent price action.
What it does not explain is the deeper concern now circulating among investors, the growing awareness of how much exposure rests on paper representations relative to physical supply.
This is not a revelation. Commodity markets have always operated with layered claims. What matters is confidence: confidence that contracts will settle smoothly, that cash settlement will remain acceptable, and that physical delivery will remain marginal rather than systemic.
Lebanon’s banking system relied on the same assumptions
Why Gold Is Not the ‘Lollar’
It is important not to stretch the analogy too far. Gold itself cannot become the lollar.
Physical gold has no issuer, carries no counterparty risk and does not depend on a banking system or sovereign balance sheet. Also, it cannot be frozen, redenominated or restructured. The lollar emerged because the underlying dollars were not there. Gold, by contrast, exists independently of financial intermediaries.
The Risk of Fragmentation
The real risk facing the gold market is not a collapse in prices, but fragmentation.
In a sufficiently severe stress scenario, triggered by financial instability or a sudden loss of faith in paper settlement, the market could bifurcate:
- physical gold trading at a premium
- allocated holdings preferred over synthetic exposure
- paper prices reflecting liquidity conditions rather than scarcity
This would not signal a failure of gold as an asset. It would signal a repricing of ownership versus exposure.
Lebanese depositors experienced exactly this shift
The mistake was assuming that all dollars were equal until the system proved otherwise.
A Question of Trust
Gold does not face a supply crisis. It faces a trust question.
As long as investors are content with price exposure rather than possession, paper gold will continue to function as designed. If that preference shifts, even modestly, the distinction between claims and assets will reassert itself quickly.
Markets are adept at ignoring such distinctions in calm periods
They rediscover them abruptly under stress.
Lebanon’s crisis did not begin with panic. It began with a simple question: What do I actually own?
Gold markets would do well to keep that question in mind.
