ThisDinosaur wrote:It makes more sense to use a basket of other national currencies than bitcoin to hedge US inflation, as bitcoin is kind of a bet in favor of the popularity of that particular cryptocurrency over others.
Absolutely. Except, I never mentioned gold (or Bitcoin) as inflation/deflation hedges:
> but really, gold just has this mindshare, perception worldwide (throughout human history) that it is nearly a universally accepted/useful/valuable money. That's all.
Gold is the most commonly regarded as a valuable "money" (even if it's not as practical any longer with credit cards or digital payments or cash) in the world. There will always be money changers which will give you close to market rate (closer than other mediums like guns, foreign currencies, electronics) in local currency (paper/polymer notes, mpesa, cigarettes, detergent, baby formula, drugs, alcohol).
Bitcoin indeed is a totally different sort of "investment." Or money for that matter. But it is strikingly similar (limited supply, convenient to secure) and better (digital/math based which gives it great capabilities like access anywhere, store anywhere, more capable of being hidden/secured, fast settlement for non face-to-face transactions (f2f gold is better, unless "trusted computing" becomes prevalent), auditable and capable of proving you have access to funds, and many, many more) than gold. Yet it is minuscule still in the minds of most people (it's market cap of $9B instead of $7T for gold) and still in the experimental stage.
I would advocate diversifying among new intriguing or growing crypto-currencies. You don't want to be all in with myspace when facebook takes off.
ThisDinosaur wrote:
The beginning and end of Bretton Woods led to the rising popularity among nations of fiat currency. I don't foresee the government use of monetary policy manipulation becoming less common in the future. It gives them way too much control.
Agreed. The realistic way this could change is basically (quite, free market type of) revolution (crypto-currencies) or practical collapse (Venezuela, Egypt). (economic/monetary warfare fits into either of those, too, I think).
ThisDinosaur wrote:
And central bank gold reserves strikes me as banks behaving like doomsday preppers; hedging against their own currency. I don't mean to condescend to preppers BTW, I just think gold reserves would be worth more to banks than to individuals in a doomsday situation.
If it's good enough for banks?
ThisDinosaur wrote:In a SHTF scenario, I think you'd be better served with a rifle and a large garden than some gold coins.
From experience (interesting read, of people that actually went through SHTF):
http://www.metafilter.com/137458/In-war ... er#5461243 (specifically
http://ask.metafilter.com/76997/Where-t ... da#1144184)
http://www.rapidtrends.com/surving-arge ... -part-1-3/
ThisDinosaur wrote:
Thermodynamically, you have to put energy/material (value) into the system, and that HAS to come from the stocks. Gold produces nothing, bond principle either goes up or down with money supply, but neither add value to the system. Try backtesting a version of the PP with a steadily declining stock allocation. It will not end well.
What do goods in general produce? They are all worthless and only have value in so far as humans think they are valuable and can be used to some purpose (even if it means making a swimming pool filled with gold coins), hence a price is determined.
I would be interested in the opposite backtesting, steadily declining the less volatile (or rather, least anticipated growth) asset percentages. AKA glide path.
ThisDinosaur wrote:
So, again, the gold works awesome in those cycles where bonds, cash, and stocks all decline simultaneously (constructive interference), but I don't see why gold ALONE should be so good at this. And you still need to have predicted the correct stock blend for it to work at all.
My best guess is again that gold has
> this mindshare, perception worldwide (throughout human history) that it is nearly a universally accepted/useful/valuable money.
and it's a place of stability, which humans like and may prefer over trying to make returns in certain environments.
ThisDinosaur wrote:Agree with everything FBeyer just said, especially that first paragraph. But, before I can even think about whether I should put a quarter of my life savings in a vault in my house, I need a damn good reason for owning it at all.
At it's current price ($1240/oz) and assuming a $1M portfolio and 20% PP allocation, it means you have 4.57kg (10lbs) of gold. Seems exceptionally value dense and one reason it has been considered a good money throughout history and why we make jewellery out of it. So, you are just placing your risk/trust in yourself/environment instead of others if you chose to hold it in your home.
ThisDinosaur wrote:Inflation hedging with a hard asset makes sense, but it would have to be something that people would conceivably buy from you during stagflation,
Like... gold.
ThisDinosaur wrote:even after the world realizes that gold is nearly useless
I guess this is the crux of the aversion, you somehow think gold is not correctly priced at $1240/oz, or that in a future time (in present dollars) it will be (worth)less?
Maybe you prefer other commodities like silver (or timber, fresh water, medicine, etc) over gold, which may just have too much human psychology baked into it's price? I would probably agree there of course (and don't think I could bring myself to do 20% gold. Bitcoin maybe.), but it's very hard to go against the domination/maximalism of gold throughout human history, especially when investors are fleeing away/into certain assets. Maybe the next iPhone will actually be decorated with pokemon trading cards on the back instead of gold. And of course I can't put my timber land in my pocket (or dissolve it into acid) while I flee one region to another (or find a buyer before I flee, unless I can reasonably predict the future much better than others).
Tyler9000 wrote:
I personally have an aversion to emerging markets much like others have to gold. They've sharply fallen off of their historical high averages and continue to set new lows, and I guess I don't trust them. At least not in significant percentages.
Interesting. I am very much a bull for emerging markets in the long run. Eventually the Californians will migrate there (South America, Canada (jk)) instead of TX/WA/CO

Bull on Russia, South America at least. Though I'm not convinced if the emerging market indexes will capture the growth in value. Probably better to be more intelligent about how to capture the value.