Dear Reader,
This week, U.S. gold reserves hit an unprecedented $1 TRILLION in value...
And it's sparking urgent chatter that...
This would be the fifth time this has happened, and surely the most dramatic for folks who own gold (and folks who don't).
Which may explain why gold just blew past $3,800, a new all-time high.
And why Bank of England staff are working overnight to keep up with the amount of gold being pulled from vaults, in what was called a "Trump-Fueled Frenzy"...
Forbes calls the "Mar-a-Lago Accord" a plan to remake the financial system... that could "turn global financial markets upside down."
The Financial Times says, "the unimaginable is becoming imaginable"... and that it could "upend the global monetary system."
And the Wall Street Journal calls it a 'New World Order.'
If you have any money in the market, at the very least...
Watch this short broadcast to understand what's underway.
If you DON'T own gold, it may not be an option for you in the coming weeks.
There are decades where nothing happens, and weeks where decades happen. I'm convinced the "Mar-a-Lago Accord" will go down in history as one of those "dividing line" moments in history...
My one job today is to tell you how to get your money on the right side of what's happening (or risk losing up to 40% of your wealth.)
Look...
I've spent nearly 20 years helping folks navigate the toughest market moments. I foresaw the 2022 market crash and warned my readers to raise cash months in advance.
And I've helped my readers see gains like 1,200% on Microsoft and 800% on Berkshire Hathaway.
But this is bigger than any of that. And it is urgent.
In fact, I believe it could be among the most seismic stories I've ever covered:
A controlled demolition of the monetary order that could weaken the U.S. dollar by up to 40% in the next two years.
But this isn't just a warning, it's an opportunity...
Currency expert Jim Rickards, who advises the Department of Defense and major hedge funds, predicts gold could be revalued to as high as $27,533 per ounce, practically overnight.
Even if he's half right, the gains could be preposterous.
Watch my urgent broadcast now to get the full story.
It'll take just a few minutes, and it could be the most important decision you make for your financial future.
I've been through enough market cycles to know that hesitation can be costly.
Don't let today become a day you regret for not acting.
I'm here to help you navigate this moment. So let's get your money on the right side of history.
Here's to our health, wealth, and a great retirement,
Dr. David Eifrig, MD, MBA
Senior Partner, Stansberry Research
CEO, MarketWise
Why Procter & Gamble Remains a Buy-and-Hold Favorite
Written by Thomas Hughes. Published 10/27/2025.
Key Points
- Procter & Gamble is well-positioned to deliver market-beating total returns over the next two to five years.
- A low valuation, high yield, and outlook for sustained revenue and earnings growth underpin the outlook.
- Analysts and institutional trends suggest PG stock bottomed in Q3 2025 and is poised to move higher from there.
Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) is a solid bet for long-term total returns because its stock price sits near the low end of its historical P/E range, its yield is near the high end of its range, and its FQ1 2026 results reinforce its outlook for growth, cash flow, and capital returns.
What are total returns? Total returns measure an investor's net gain, including dividends and share-price appreciation. As of late October, the stock yields roughly 2.75% and could appreciate by 25% or more over the coming years.
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Price appreciation should be supported by the company's business quality and growth, which sustain a healthy balance sheet and steady capital returns, including share repurchases.
Share buybacks are important to the stock's outlook because they reduce the share count at a semi-aggressive pace each year and are unlikely to be suspended in the near term.
The dividend is attractive — the yield sits above 2.5% — and another positive is the company's outlook for dividend increases. Procter & Gamble is a Dividend King with 70 consecutive years of annual increases and appears to have the capacity to continue raising the payout for the foreseeable future.
Share repurchases help offset the cost of dividend increases. The payout ratio is moderate at about 65%, in line with peers, and earnings growth is expected. MarketBeat consensus forecasts a mid-single-digit EPS CAGR, slightly ahead of revenue growth and consistent with the company's dividend growth outlook.
Procter & Gamble Rises After Posting Solid Results
Procter & Gamble's FQ1 results were solid, beating expectations on both the top and bottom lines; revenue grew 3.0%. The gains were driven largely by FX translation and pricing, but all segments contributed, and several showed organic growth. Beauty and Grooming delivered organic gains, helping push overall organic growth to about 2%.
Margins were another area of resilience. Despite some margin pressure, P&G mitigated those headwinds better than expected. The quarter produced $5.4 billion in operating cash flow, $4.8 billion in net earnings, and adjusted EPS that rose 3%, comfortably ahead of estimates. Adjusted EPS of $1.99 topped consensus by a meaningful margin, suggesting management's guidance may be conservative.
P&G reaffirmed its earnings guidance, with a midpoint slightly below the consensus estimate. Management expects some weakness in upcoming quarters that would offset Q1 strength, but that outlook appears to downplay signs of consumer resiliency seen across its own results and other consumer-focused companies' earnings reports.
Given the quarter's upside and the resilience in consumer spending, the more likely outcome is that P&G will outperform in coming quarters and raise guidance later in the year.
Institutional and Analyst Trends Point to a Bottom for PG
Analyst and institutional trends suggest PG may have put in a bottom. Analysts rate it a Moderate Buy and envision double-digit upside to their targets, while institutions are net buyers. Institutions have bought at a pace of more than $2.50 for every $1 sold this year and now own roughly 65% of the stock, providing a solid support base. Reaching the consensus target would put the market on track for new highs likely in 2026.
Technically, the action is constructive. PG jumped about 2.5% in premarket trading on Oct. 24, which confirmed a short-term bottom near $147. If the market follows through, PG should continue to rise and retake support around the moving-average cluster, with a path to roughly $170 in early 2026 and potentially all-time highs by mid-year. If the follow-through fails, the stock will likely trade around late-October levels until a stronger catalyst emerges.
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