Diggin4copper wrote:Gold/silver is still the only investment I feel somewhat safe with. Where else can I invest 100 bucks a month and feel safe with it? savings accounts are crap, I am afraid of the stock market, Whiskey gives me a headache, and scratch tickets are just plajn dumb...
shinnosuke wrote:Fiat currency always goes to zero while PMs have never done so.
inflationhawk wrote:If you use the dollar today to buy stock in a diversified multinational stock fund (whether it be a mutual fund, ETF, or a group of stocks of your own choice) you are not holding fiat currency, you have ownership in a company that can do business in any currency of the day. That being said hard assets have their place in a portfolio as well. Putting all your money in gold/silver will likely not increase your standard of living over time, you may keep up with inflation and see the nominal value go up, but those new currency units won't necessarily buy you more than when you started.
inflationhawk wrote:just don't expect to grow your real inflation adjusted wealth over the long term.
inflationhawk wrote:In the short term that is true and I don't disagree. Gold/silver prices could overshoot on the downside too in the short term if actual inflation doesn't meet expected inflation. Making gold/silver as much speculation as a hedge against inflation in the short term. Hence another reason that gold/silver shouldn't be the only thing you use your fiat currency for, unless you don't mind the short term volatility.
By the way, silver is really much more an industrial metal and that makes its price movements harder to tie to any one thing. I lumped it in with my examples, but really I probably shouldn't have. Note the fluctuation in the gold silver ratio itself. The fact it's not constant inherently means there are different drivers for the price of each.
beauanderos wrote:... I'd rather be early to the party than late.
slvrbck wrote:Gold has seen positive results of at least 5% annually for at least the past ten years. I think over that span the average annual return is something like 19.2% If thats not a bull I dont know what is. when we get two years back to back of negative returns we'll talk.
scyther wrote:slvrbck wrote:Gold has seen positive results of at least 5% annually for at least the past ten years. I think over that span the average annual return is something like 19.2% If thats not a bull I dont know what is. when we get two years back to back of negative returns we'll talk.
I certainly don't deny that there was a bull market. I just wonder if it's over.
scyther wrote:slvrbck wrote:Gold has seen positive results of at least 5% annually for at least the past ten years. I think over that span the average annual return is something like 19.2% If thats not a bull I dont know what is. when we get two years back to back of negative returns we'll talk.
I certainly don't deny that there was a bull market. I just wonder if it's over.
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