Monopoly Rule 11 and our monetary system

4,212 Views | 59 Replies | Last: 12 days ago by LOYAL AG
Its Texas Aggies, dammit
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The below is an AI summary of a Substack about how our monetary system works and what to do in response. I wish I had known this 20 years ago.

The principle articulated in Monopoly's Rule 11that the bank can never run out of money because it can simply create moreserves as a remarkably accurate analogy for the operational reality of the modern Federal Reserve system. This analysis examines the mechanics, consequences, and strategic implications of this monetary framework, revealing a system that systematically redistributes wealth and creates structural advantages for specific economic actors.

The Federal Reserve's implementation of its own "Rule 11" began in earnest during the 2008 financial crisis with quantitative easing (QE). The Fed's balance sheet expanded from approximately $900 billion to $4.5 trillion between 2008-2014 through three rounds of QE. This expansion accelerated dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic, when the Fed added $4.8 trillion in just two years, bringing its total balance sheet to nearly $9 trillion by early 2022. This meant the Fed created more money between March 2020 and March 2022 than in its entire 106-year history preceding 2008.

The mechanical process involves the Treasury issuing bonds, which the Fed purchases primarily through designated primary dealer banks. Crucially, the Fed doesn't use existing dollars for these purchasesit creates new digital currency by crediting the sellers' accounts. This process, euphemistically termed "asset purchases" or "providing liquidity," constitutes money creation in its purest form. The fundamental reality remains: the institution that creates the currency cannot become insolvent in that currency, much like the Monopoly bank.

The consequences of this money creation manifest through what economists term the "closed loop problem." While the money supply (M2) has expanded approximately 70-fold since 1960, reaching over $22 trillion today, the supply of desirable assetsproductive real estate, profitable companies, and scarce resourceshas grown at a much slower rate, typically 2-3% annually. This divergence creates inevitable asset price inflation as increasing quantities of currency chase relatively finite assets. The S&P 500's rise from 100 in 1980 to over 6,800 today and the dramatic appreciation of real estate values reflect this dynamic rather than proportional increases in underlying economic productivity.

The distributional consequences are captured by the Cantillon Effect, named for 18th-century economist Richard Cantillon, who observed that those who receive new money first benefit at the expense of those who receive it later. In the Fed's implementation, primary dealer banks and their clientshedge funds, institutional investors, and large corporationsreceive the newly created currency first. They deploy this capital to acquire assets before prices adjust to reflect the increased money supply. By the time the currency circulates to ordinary workers through wage increases or consumer spending, asset prices have already risen, effectively transferring purchasing power from later recipients to earlier recipients.

The data substantiating this effect is staggering. According to Federal Reserve statistics, the wealthiest 10% of Americans own 90% of all stocks, while the bottom 50% own just 1%. The wealth gap between the top 1% and bottom 50% has exploded from approximately $4 trillion in 1990 to $47 trillion today. The average member of the top 1% saw wealth increase by approximately $13.6 million (8.3x) during this period, while the average person in the bottom half gained roughly $19,300 (4.3x). This divergence accelerated markedly following the 2008 crisis and subsequent QE programs, demonstrating how monetary policy functions as a powerful wealth redistribution mechanism.

The system incorporates a structural asymmetry in risk assessment and consequence management. Historical precedentsthe 1998 Long-Term Capital Management bailout, the 2008 Bear Stearns rescue and subsequent crisis responses, and the 2020 pandemic interventionsestablish that financial institutions benefit from a de facto "Get Out of Jail Free" card. When these institutions face losses from risky behavior, the Fed intervenes with liquidity support and asset purchases, socializing losses through inflation and currency debasement. This creates moral hazard and ensures that financial elites capture profits during expansions while avoiding the full consequences of their miscalculations during contractions.

The fiscal context exacerbates these dynamics. With monthly deficits reaching $284 billion (as exemplified by October 2025's $404 billion receipts versus $689 billion outlays), the government must continuously issue debt. The Fed ultimately monetizes significant portions of this debt through its bond purchase programs, creating a feedback loop where deficit spending necessitates money creation, which in turn fuels the asset inflation and wealth redistribution described above.

Given these structural realities, strategic adaptation becomes necessary. The winning approach mirrors successful Monopoly strategy: prioritize ownership of scarce, productive assets over currency accumulation. Real estate in desirable locations, gold with its 5,000-year history as a store of value, and Bitcoin with its mathematically enforced scarcity represent assets that cannot be devalued through central bank money creation. These assets maintain their value not because they appreciate in absolute terms, but because they preserve purchasing power as the currency unit depreciates.

The fundamental insight remains that countries borrowing in their own currency don't typically default through formal bankruptcy; they devalue their obligations through inflation. The United States appears committed to this path given its structural deficits and debt levels. Consequently, individuals must recognize that the system won't changethe rules are written by those who benefit from them. The rational response isn't futile opposition but strategic positioning within the existing framework. Ownership of scarce assets represents the only reliable defense against the systematic wealth transfer effected through monetary inflation and the Cantillon Effect. In the real-world version of Monopoly, the bank possesses unlimited paper and ink, and victory belongs to those who recognize that cash is for transactions while assets are for preserving wealth.
DallasAg 94
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Its Texas Aggies, dammit said:



The Federal Reserve's implementation of its own "Rule 11" began in earnest during the 2008 financial crisis with quantitative easing (QE).

I didn't have to read past that.

In 1933, FDR suspended the Gold Standard.
In 1971, Nixon changed the convertibility of the USD to Gold. Called "Nixon Shock."

Prior to that, there were 3 things done in the 1913-1919 range that were even more significant.

1913 - Creation of the Federal Reserve
The Revenue Act of 1913 moved us from a Tariff to Income Tax system which was allowed based on the 16th Amendment of 1909. Interestingly, the BDV Lincoln Penny was introduced in 1909.
1917 - Suspension of the Gold Standard for Foreign Exchange
Mas89
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Gold was $1,630 per ounce in Nov 2022. 4,230 Today, 3 years later.
Its Texas Aggies, dammit
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DallasAg 94 said:

Its Texas Aggies, dammit said:



The Federal Reserve's implementation of its own "Rule 11" began in earnest during the 2008 financial crisis with quantitative easing (QE).

I didn't have to read past that.

In 1933, FDR suspended the Gold Standard.
In 1971, Nixon changed the convertibility of the USD to Gold. Called "Nixon Shock."

Prior to that, there were 3 things done in the 1913-1919 range that were even more significant.

1913 - Creation of the Federal Reserve
The Revenue Act of 1913 moved us from a Tariff to Income Tax system which was allowed based on the 16th Amendment of 1909. Interestingly, the BDV Lincoln Penny was introduced in 1909.
1917 - Suspension of the Gold Standard for Foreign Exchange


I agree. It is not a comprehensive historical account. Doesn't change the trajectory of what is coming.
Get Off My Lawn
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A. Another example of AI struggling with brevity.
B. I remain incredibly skeptical about information presented by ai. Could be excellent, could include some bs. A human can lie, too, but at least motivation & human behavior persist at the human level where we have tools to pick up on bias or intent. If authors are adversaries, AI the Joker; its lack of coherent motivation makes it unpredictable.
C. Posting AI summaries should probably be like posting excerpts from human authors: the OP should add some thoughts on relevancy and value.
Its Texas Aggies, dammit
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Get Off My Lawn said:

A. Another example of AI struggling with brevity.
B. I remain incredibly skeptical about information presented by ai. Could be excellent, could include some bs. A human can lie, too, but at least motivation & human behavior persist at the human level where we have tools to pick up on bias or intent. If authors are adversaries, AI the Joker; its lack of coherent motivation makes it unpredictable.
C. Posting AI summaries should probably be like posting excerpts from human authors: the OP should add some thoughts on relevancy and value.


"I wish I had known this 20 years ago."
Mas89
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AG
He did mention wishing he had known this 20 years ago

In 2005, 20 years ago, Gold was $430 per ounce. Again, it's $4,230 Today.

And it looks like the SP 500 was around 1200 in 2005, so let's say it's up 6x in 20 years and Gold is up 10x.
Just wish we knew what the next 20 years will bring. My bet is on hard assets over Paper.
flown-the-coop
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In a society of post-monetary apocalypse, peanut butter and .22 plinking bullets will be worth more than gold. Plan accordingly.
rocky the dog
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Elections are when people find out what politicians stand for, and politicians find out what people will fall for.
lb3
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Mas89 said:

He did mention wishing he had known this 20 years ago

In 2005, 20 years ago, Gold was $430 per ounce. Again, it's $4,230 Today.

And it looks like the SP 500 was around 1200 in 2005, so let's say it's up 6x in 20 years and Gold is up 10x.
Just wish we knew what the next 20 years will bring. My bet is on hard assets over Paper.
I live in a neighborhood of rednecks with money. I can't figure out how everyone can afford houses with 1700 sqft garages, toys to fill them, new pools, and home remodels less than a year after moving in. Either everyone is in debt to their eyeballs which I can't comprehend with rates they way they are, their incomes are far higher then mine which could be possible but based on the dumbass **** I see people doing, I doubt it, or they all inherited boomer bucks from their parents.

As the Boomers die off, I would invest in companies that pimp out golf carts and 4x4 utility vehicles with lifts, lights, and loudspeakers.
panhandlefarmer
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AG
Will you please provide a link to the substack source?
KingofHazor
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Quote:

I live in a neighborhood of rednecks with money. I can't figure out how everyone can afford houses with 1700 sqft garages, toys to fill them, new pools, and home remodels less than a year after moving in. Either everyone is in debt to their eyeballs which I can't comprehend with rates they way they are, their incomes are far higher then mine which could be possible but based on the dumbass **** I see people doing, I doubt it, or they all inherited boomer bucks from their parents.

They're all in sales? You don't have to have a high IQ to wildly successful in sales.
Mas89
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It is amazing at some of the wealth being where you would least expect it today. Plenty of Se Tx land in the Houston area is selling for 20-70 x what it sold for just 20-30 years ago. One local ranch just sold for about 70x for 1,000 acres. 45 million plus. The farmer bought it in the mid 90s and worked hard to pay for it.
In the same area, some plant workers retire with 3-5 million before age 60. Stocks have done well also.
lb3
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KingofHazor said:

Quote:

I live in a neighborhood of rednecks with money. I can't figure out how everyone can afford houses with 1700 sqft garages, toys to fill them, new pools, and home remodels less than a year after moving in. Either everyone is in debt to their eyeballs which I can't comprehend with rates they way they are, their incomes are far higher then mine which could be possible but based on the dumbass **** I see people doing, I doubt it, or they all inherited boomer bucks from their parents.

They're all in sales? You don't have to have a high IQ to wildly successful in sales.
Maybe. We have a couple cops living in the neighborhood so no big money there, one truck driver is ticked off on Facebook because the HOA won't let him park his new Class 8 truck in his driveway and makes him park it in his garage with the 14' door.
LOYAL AG
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Complaining about the Federal Reserve without acknowledging the political changes that accompany that beast is short sighted. The problem is a political one that originated in 1913, months before the federal reserve was created.

16th Amendment was ratified in February, 1913 and created the income tax. This gave the federal government unprecedented power to tax citizens to generate cash. This is the foundation for every government excess we see today. We're all familiar with the "democracy is doomed to fail…" observation. This is the mechanism that allows citizens to vote themselves a raise from the treasury. Without the income tax there's simply not enough cash in the government to pay for those hand outs.

17th Amendment was ratified in April, 1913 and changed how Senators are elected. Prior to this amendment they were appointed by the state legislatures. Afterwards we had statewide elections. This amendment stripped away the state's ability to reign in the federal government. This is the foundation of the federal government becoming the most powerful entity on earth. With a 50/50 Senate which is about where we've been for most of the past 30 years nothing gets done. There are currently 28 state legislatures that are completely Republican controlled, 1 that's split and Nebraska has a unicameral legislature. If we assume the Republican controlled states send two Republicans, the Democrat controlled states send 2 Democrats and the others split 1 each then we have a Senate that's 58/42 Republican which is a significant difference from the 53/47 we have now. In that world there's pressure on the Democrat from Nebraska to side with the Republicans and we're one vote from a filibuster proof number. That's a world where the Democrats don't get away with the nonsense we see from them today. This amendment amounts to the states neutering themselves.

Creation of the Federal Reserve in December, 1913. If the 16th and 17th represent a massive shift in power from the states and people to the federal government this effectively gave them a black check to do whatever they wanted. We have the illusion of voting for fiscal policy by voting for the candidate that offers the best tax and spending plans for us but we don't get to vote on inflation, they just foist it upon us year after year, without fail. They even set targets for how fast they're going to destroy our wealth and tell us about them.

This "abolish the Fed" stuff is cute but it's only part of the problem. Repeal the 16th and 17th and return power to the people and the states. Then let's see where we are even with the Fed.
Sid Farkas
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Quote:

the 2020 pandemic interventions establish that financial institutions benefit from a de facto "Get Out of Jail Free" card.

Reason 1001 Fauci should be wearing prison orange and working a chain gang till he dies.
lb3
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Mas89 said:

It is amazing at some of the wealth being where you would least expect it today. Plenty of Se Tx land in the Houston area is selling for 20-70 x what it sold for just 20-30 years ago. One local ranch just sold for about 70x for 1,000 acres. 45 million plus. The farmer bought it in the mid 90s and worked hard to pay for it.
In the same area, some plant workers retire with 3-5 million before age 60. Stocks have done well also.
This is why I'm thinking they are inheriting the money. It feels like a Gen X neighborhood with a few young boomers. Gen X didn't have much money to invest in the 90s and if they did, the dot com bust and 2008 crash set them back. Could be asset appreciation but again this age cohort didn't have much money in the 90s.

This isn't some fancy golf course neighborhood just a nicer cookie cutter neighborhood with the distinction of having massive garages.
TTUArmy
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"Those closest to the money spigot win." - Cantillon Effect

Not that I envy them, simply an observation...

Think about the insane wealth accumulated by people relative to their positions to large banks and/or Wall Street:
  • politicians
  • oil company execs
  • Tesla
  • NVIDIA
  • OpenAI
  • Blackrock
  • etc...
It all makes sense to me. If one desired that kind of money and power, simply choose to be closer to the money spigot.

And I agree with everything in the summary...
TTUArmy
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lb3 said:

Mas89 said:

It is amazing at some of the wealth being where you would least expect it today. Plenty of Se Tx land in the Houston area is selling for 20-70 x what it sold for just 20-30 years ago. One local ranch just sold for about 70x for 1,000 acres. 45 million plus. The farmer bought it in the mid 90s and worked hard to pay for it.
In the same area, some plant workers retire with 3-5 million before age 60. Stocks have done well also.

This is why I'm thinking they are inheriting the money. It feels like a Gen X neighborhood with a few young boomers. Gen X didn't have much money to invest in the 90s and if they did, the dot com bust and 2008 crash set them back. Could be asset appreciation but again this age cohort didn't have much money in the 90s.

This isn't some fancy golf course neighborhood just a nicer cookie cutter neighborhood with the distinction of having massive garages.

Yeah... I lost a great deal of physical possession in the first one. I lost my family in the second one trying to make up for what I lost in the first one. I'm good now, but it was a tough place to be earlier in life. Live and learn.
Burdizzo
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KingofHazor said:

Quote:

I live in a neighborhood of rednecks with money. I can't figure out how everyone can afford houses with 1700 sqft garages, toys to fill them, new pools, and home remodels less than a year after moving in. Either everyone is in debt to their eyeballs which I can't comprehend with rates they way they are, their incomes are far higher then mine which could be possible but based on the dumbass **** I see people doing, I doubt it, or they all inherited boomer bucks from their parents.

They're all in sales? You don't have to have a high IQ to wildly successful in sales.



Being successful in sales usually correlates to a dearth of ethics and morals
Pooh-ah95_ESL
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TTUArmy said:

lb3 said:

Mas89 said:

It is amazing at some of the wealth being where you would least expect it today. Plenty of Se Tx land in the Houston area is selling for 20-70 x what it sold for just 20-30 years ago. One local ranch just sold for about 70x for 1,000 acres. 45 million plus. The farmer bought it in the mid 90s and worked hard to pay for it.
In the same area, some plant workers retire with 3-5 million before age 60. Stocks have done well also.

This is why I'm thinking they are inheriting the money. It feels like a Gen X neighborhood with a few young boomers. Gen X didn't have much money to invest in the 90s and if they did, the dot com bust and 2008 crash set them back. Could be asset appreciation but again this age cohort didn't have much money in the 90s.

This isn't some fancy golf course neighborhood just a nicer cookie cutter neighborhood with the distinction of having massive garages.

Yeah... I lost a great deal of physical possession in the first one. I lost my family in the second one trying to make up for what I lost in the first one. I'm good now, but it was a tough place to be earlier in life. Live and learn.


I was lucky enough to have money to invest in Global Crossing, Enron, and quite a few dogs in those days. There were a handful of good companies too but after the bloodbath I didn't hang on. Made me a gun shy investor for 12 to 15 years...

If things don't seem right they probably aren't but things can stay squirrly much longer than seems rational.
YouBet
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lb3 said:

Mas89 said:

It is amazing at some of the wealth being where you would least expect it today. Plenty of Se Tx land in the Houston area is selling for 20-70 x what it sold for just 20-30 years ago. One local ranch just sold for about 70x for 1,000 acres. 45 million plus. The farmer bought it in the mid 90s and worked hard to pay for it.
In the same area, some plant workers retire with 3-5 million before age 60. Stocks have done well also.

This is why I'm thinking they are inheriting the money. It feels like a Gen X neighborhood with a few young boomers. Gen X didn't have much money to invest in the 90s and if they did, the dot com bust and 2008 crash set them back. Could be asset appreciation but again this age cohort didn't have much money in the 90s.

This isn't some fancy golf course neighborhood just a nicer cookie cutter neighborhood with the distinction of having massive garages.

Disagree. It didn't set back any of Gen X who kept DCA'ing into the stock market through the 2008 Great Recession. Those of that did came out of the other end very well off from a percentage growth standpoint. Our net worth took off coming out of it with that massive dip in cost basis.

Timing wise it's one of the more fortuitous things to happen to Gen X.

Dot com bust was different matter. I joined the work force in 1997 so I didn't have enough in investments to really matter one way or the other but I never stopped investing through it, so I ultimately came out on top with that as well.
lb3
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AG
After the dot com bust I joked that a used motorcycle was my best performing asset having only lost half its value in depreciation.
YouBet
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lb3 said:

After the dot com bust I joked that a used motorcycle was my best performing asset having only lost half its value in depreciation.

I'm not sure I had enough in investments during that time to even buy a used motorcycle. Our only "assets" were a 1998 Mitsubishi Galant and a 1999 Jeep Wrangler. Lived in a $500 duplex with no dishwasher and no washer or dryer.
lb3
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YouBet said:

lb3 said:

After the dot com bust I joked that a used motorcycle was my best performing asset having only lost half its value in depreciation.

I'm not sure I had enough in investments during that time to even buy a used motorcycle. Our only "assets" were a 1998 Mitsubishi Galant and a 1999 Jeep Wrangler. Lived in a $500 duplex with no dishwasher and no washer or dryer.
I entered the workforce in 1998 and lived in an $800/mo apartment so I had a dishwasher but I was really frugal (and had no debt) so I was able to scrape together about $25k in retirement assets and another $10k in taxable assets by 2001. In 1999 my first full year working my taxable income was $17k so when I say frugal, I literally mean ground turkey in my hamburger helper.
BigRobSA
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KingofHazor said:

Quote:

I live in a neighborhood of rednecks with money. I can't figure out how everyone can afford houses with 1700 sqft garages, toys to fill them, new pools, and home remodels less than a year after moving in. Either everyone is in debt to their eyeballs which I can't comprehend with rates they way they are, their incomes are far higher then mine which could be possible but based on the dumbass **** I see people doing, I doubt it, or they all inherited boomer bucks from their parents.

They're all in sales? You don't have to have a high IQ to wildly successful in sales.


Sr Exec VP of sales, are you?
pete_claw98
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I thought this was going to be about Free Parking…. Didn't read after someone else chose the Racecar
KingofHazor
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Phenomenal post. Cannot blue star you enough.
Its Texas Aggies, dammit
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panhandlefarmer said:

Will you please provide a link to the substack source?


It's called the informationist.
CDUB98
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Quote:

This creates moral hazard and ensures that financial elites capture profits during expansions while avoiding the full consequences of their miscalculations during contractions.

CDUB98
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Quote:

It didn't set back any of Gen X who kept DCA'ing into the stock market through the 2008 Great Recession. Those of that did came out of the other end very well off from a percentage growth standpoint. Our net worth took off coming out of it with that massive dip in cost basis.

See my first quote.

Yes, all in all, most of us here on TA are considered the financial elite.

Are 99.9% if us wiping our asses with $100 bills, no, but in comparison to many in America, the fact that we have strongly contributed to our retirement funds over the years has had a significant result thanks to the spiking inflation.

Now, purchasing power in comparison......well, that's where everyone but the 1% gets screwed.
YouBet
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CDUB98 said:

Quote:

It didn't set back any of Gen X who kept DCA'ing into the stock market through the 2008 Great Recession. Those of that did came out of the other end very well off from a percentage growth standpoint. Our net worth took off coming out of it with that massive dip in cost basis.

See my first quote.

Yes, all in all, most of us here on TA are considered the financial elite.

Are 99.9% if us wiping our asses with $100 bills, no, but in comparison to many in America, the fact that we have strongly contributed to our retirement funds over the years has had a significant result thanks to the spiking inflation.

Now, purchasing power in comparison......well, that's where everyone but the 1% gets screwed.


Yeah, but anyone could have done what we did during that time period. We weren't close to the spigot at our level. I was a Manager probably making $60kish. My wife was a Mgr or Sr. Mgr...can't recall making probably $75K. We were middle class. My only point is that if you kept plugging away during that whole ordeal you came out very well on the other side. Whole lotta people with long horizons panicked and pulled out of the market and screwed themselves.

Agree on the purchasing power issue these days. Again, K economy.
Heineken-Ashi
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Get Off My Lawn said:

A. Another example of AI struggling with brevity.
B. I remain incredibly skeptical about information presented by ai. Could be excellent, could include some bs. A human can lie, too, but at least motivation & human behavior persist at the human level where we have tools to pick up on bias or intent. If authors are adversaries, AI the Joker; its lack of coherent motivation makes it unpredictable.
C. Posting AI summaries should probably be like posting excerpts from human authors: the OP should add some thoughts on relevancy and value.

I've written numerous posts over the years tackling the majority of the content in this. The AI did a great job. I would highly suggest reading and learning.
Ribeye-Rare
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H-A,

I was hoping you would weigh in on this topic so that I could get your take on this:
Quote:

The winning approach mirrors successful Monopoly strategy: prioritize ownership of scarce, productive assets over currency accumulation. Real estate in desirable locations, gold with its 5,000-year history as a store of value, and Bitcoin with its mathematically enforced scarcity represent assets that cannot be devalued through central bank money creation.

I noticed that analysis left out financial assets (specifically stocks) valued in U.S. Dollars.

Given that you are one who does more than 'dabble' in equities, do you view stocks as just as good a hedge against currency devaluation as the three assets listed?

Ostensibly, stocks supposedly are valued based on the future earning potential of the issuing companies, or perhaps on the underlying value of those companies' assets, and since those earnings and/or assets are valued in U.S. Dollars, it would seem their nominal values should rise as the currency is devalued.

I realize though, that's a bit simplistic, and that emotional and other factors can weigh in on stock valuations. I guess a case in point would be the decline earlier this year that supposedly was due to the fear of Trump's tariffs, but which now seems to have vanished like a mirage.
Burdizzo
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AG
That is a great recap of landmark events during that period. The irony is that the 16th, 17th, and Fed Reserve Act were largely responses to progressive and populist desires to empower the people. Instead what it did was removed economic freedom and shackled middle- and low- income Americans to the Federal Government
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