Gold’s boom—and a hidden risk that could rattle markets Gold has surged more than 80% over the past 12 months, making it one of the top-performing assets. But according to Björn Schmidtke, CEO of Tether-linked gold treasury firm Aurelion (AURE), most investors aren’t actually holding physical metal—and that mismatch could become dangerous in a crisis. Paper gold vs. allocated gold The easiest way to gain gold exposure is via ETFs and other paper products. Those vehicles trade like stocks, but what many buyers don’t realize is that they typically own an IOU—not a specific bar of gold. “You bought a small piece of paper that says, ‘I owe you gold,’” Schmidtke told CoinDesk. He estimates roughly 98% of gold exposure today is effectively unallocated IOUs, meaning billions in claims are backed in theory by gold that investors can’t trace to a specific bar. Why that matters Under normal conditions this system works because few investors demand physical delivery. But Schmidtke warns of a “seismic event” — for example, a dramatic fiat collapse or panic — that triggers mass redemptions. Physical gold can’t be moved or allocated instantly: you can’t ship billions of dollars of bars in a day, and if bars aren’t tied to identifiable owners, delivery becomes a logistical bottleneck. The mismatch between paper and physical markets could send actual bullion prices spiking while paper prices lag, leaving holders of derivatives unable to settle. “We’ve already seen it in the silver market,” Schmidtke noted, pointing to episodes when physical premiums rose even as spot prices stayed flat. A simple analogy Schmidtke uses a real-estate thought experiment: if investors buy shares in a development without signing deeds, nobody knows which units belong to whom. Delivering units later becomes chaotic. The same problem exists with unallocated gold claims. Onchain gold as a fix Tokenized, onchain gold can eliminate that opacity. Aurelion now holds blockchain-based gold tokens (XAUT), each representing an allocated, specific bar sitting in Swiss vaults. Because each token is inseparably linked to one bar, ownership transfers on the blockchain act like instantly searchable title-deed transfers—ownership moves in seconds even though the physical metal stays put. That decouples settlement of title from the physical logistics of movement, reducing the bottleneck risk during mass redemptions. Aurelion’s strategy and holdings Aurelion has restructured its treasury around XAUT tokens. According to CoinGecko, the firm currently holds 33,318 XAUT tokens—roughly $153 million in backing. Schmidtke says Aurelion will only consider selling its holdings if market prices trade at a “significant and sustained discount” to the firm’s underlying gold. For now, the company is pursuing long-term compounding and plans to raise additional capital to grow its gold treasury. Takeaway for crypto and traditional investors Schmidtke’s argument is simple: how you own gold matters as much as whether you own it. For crypto-native investors, tokenized gold promises faster, auditable transfers and explicit allocation to physical bars—features that could prove critical if trust in paper markets breaks down. For traditional investors, the warning is to understand whether your exposure is a paper claim or a specifically allocated asset before assuming physical gold protection. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news