About this episode
Join the conversation: The Investor Lab Community What happens when trust in money dies? History shows it’s never gentle. From Rome’s slow debasement of silver to Weimar’s wheelbarrows of paper, every fiat collapse follows the same pattern: debasement → recognition → flight → failure. In this episode, we explore The Great Melt-Up — the moment when the illusion of stability shatters, and people rush to exchange paper promises for anything real: bread, fuel, gold, real estate, even Bitcoin. We’ll trace the cycle across centuries, uncover why inflation isn’t an accident but deliberate policy, and explain how it flips the script — savers lose, debtors win, and wealth shifts silently but brutally. Most importantly, we’ll zoom in on today: Why some currencies collapse overnight… and others rot slowly for centuries The hidden laws that drive people to hoard, dump, or flee money when trust breaks How gold, property, and even debt can flip from liabilities to lifelines in a melt-up The eerie pattern linking Rome’s denarius, Weimar’s marks, and today’s dollars This isn’t theory. It’s a timeless sequence — and it’s happening now. Fiat is the guillotine. Assets are the ladder. The choice is yours. See you on the inside. CHAPTERS:0:00 Welcome & recap from last week2:20 Trust vs. debt: what really kills currencies9:00 How long fiat money actually lasts13:30 Australia’s strange money history20:00 Case studies: when currencies die (US greenback, Zimbabwe, Venezuela)26:00 Rome’s slow debasement & the fall of an empire37:00 The five-stage currency lifecycle explained47:00 Human behaviour in collapse58:00 Hyperinflation’s craziest examples1:10:00 Gold as the timeless yardstick1:16:00 Inflation, debt, and how asset owners win1:27:00 What to do: real estate, Bitcoin & productive assets1:43:00 Wrap-up & what’s next in the series -- WATCH ON YOUTUBE: The Great Melt-Up: When Trust in Money Dies ACCESS THE REPORT: Inside The Investor Lab Community IMPORTANT: The Investor Lab is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research and seek independent professional advice before making any investment or financial decisions. – SERIES: Why Getting Ahead Is Getting Harder (and What To Do About It) Have you noticed that, no matte