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Are you really trying to convince people that gold has outperformed the stock market over time?
No, I've made it very clear that it's outperformed since SPX peaked against it. My chart essentially measures the SPX in gold.
Since 2000, SPX has underpformed. Also true is that since 2011, SPX has outperformed Gold. The last major peak before 2000 was 1967. Gold then outperformed until 1974, SPX took back over briefly until 1977, then gold continued its outperformance until 1979. For people that had their wealth in GOLD in 67 vs people in SPX, it wasn't until the late 90's that SPX was back to where it was in 67. Assuming constant dividend reinvestments you can maybe shave 10 years off. Point still stands.
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Not just from cherry-picking the best-case pre-dot.com crash arbitrary starting point?
What is this about cherrypicking? We're talking multiple decade cycles where one instrument vastly outperforms the other as a store of value and/or investment vehicle. Go look up how much round steak cost in the late 1800's in dollars. Then compared it to now. Next, go up look how much gold it would have cost to buy round steak in the late 1800's and compare to now. Gold holds its value. It's the longest running store of value. SPX is a product of liquidity and devaluation of the dollar. When you take money manipulation out of the equation, you get my chart above.. SPX as if it was valued in Gold. Wild fluctuations over time where there are long periods of time you want to be in stocks and long periods of time you are better off completely in gold. I'm not cherry picking anything. I'm pointing out that we are in a period of SPX outperformance within a greater period of gold outperformance, and that I believe gold is going to outperform in the short to mid term going forward.
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Also, are you really recommending putting all of your wealth in GOLD? At all points in history, and in the future?
I've never once said that. I've said since 2000, you would be better off in GOLD than if you left everything in the SPX. And that's fact. Going forward, my exposure will be to things that hold historical value, with reasonable allocations when I see short to mid term opportunity in dollar influenced investments (stocks, bonds, general equities). At least until it's clear that the trajectory of dollar outperformance is in a breakout phase. That's not clear today.
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You keep talking about the devaluation of the dollar, and hinting that gold is the only way to insulate yourself from this.
You need to go study historical cycles. There's a reason why the cost of everything is sky high. There's a reason why people, governments, and the world are so polarized and moving farther apart. There's a reason why societal moral decay is growing. These are all things that happen at the end of a long term debt fueled growth cycle. The cycle that follows is always one of global instability, financial contraction, and often war. I've said over and over that I can't predict if its tomorrow or 5 years from now, but that the warning signs are blaring from all directions and that we've been in this cycle since the Great Depression. We are FAR closer to the end than any other point, and I am going to be very risk averse. Will I give up some gains? Sure. But when the reversal happens, I'm going to be in a FAR better place than the common man who thinks their stocks are going to maintain value. And gold will have its ups and downs. It will absolutely crash again at some point. And I plan to be out of everything except my longest term allocation which is ride or die and a lifetime hedge against the financial system.
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Do you not agree that the S&P (made up of real companies making real products with real value) also does this? Are you saying diversification is bad?
Sure. But when you enter a period of deleveraging, it doesn't matter how strong a company is when liquidity is being sucked out of the system. Everything tied to the dollar will fall in some capacity. I will always have some exposure to companies that produce and export things the country and world NEED, like energy, food, and strong inputs for industrial expansion. But those things aren't immune to global deleveraging. Just like anything else, they are dependent on liquidity not only being available, but constantly expanding. And I believe we are about to enter a period of significant liquidity contraction, one that takes the liquidity in the system back to pre dotcom bust levels over a period of 10-20 years.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)