Home > Uncategorized > Gold: An Investment for Decades to Come

Gold: An Investment for Decades to Come

January 23rd, 2008 Brian Leave a comment Go to comments

Jake, Thanks for the newsletter. I am pretty much in sync with this writer's perspectives.

My thoughts on have not changed much in several years. I think it is a store of wealth and will do better in times of inflation and dollar devaluation (which mostly run together). Even if stays steady and goes no where against other national currencies, as long as the dollar goes down, will go up by the same amount, just as other dollar denominated commodities do, like oil.

Additionally, there is the risk premium put on for an uncertain world and, probably most importantly, the future demand that will come from Asia. is favored in Asia throughout history, so that is not likely to change soon. As Asians have more disposable income, they will buy more , and will increase global demand. Also, the Asian (and Middle Eastern) economies will grow rapidly over the next 20 years (10% a year on average, perhaps) and will probably need 10% more a year of reserves to back their currency, and maybe more as they lose confidence in the dollar and shift their reserves towards and sell dollar instruments like US Treasuries.

So, for many reasons, I think is good for many years. The only reason it did poorly the past 30 years was that the dollar took the role of global reserve currency and the global central banks, especially the US and Europe, sold off their reserves adding supply and dropping demand. I don't think the dollar will get that "Reserve Currency" role back anytime soon after all the losses incurred by governments and dollar investors around the world the past couple years.

As you know, I own through , and best of all, . Even though is a bear market fund, it held its own even in the years when stocks were in bull mode because of its holdings. It is half shorts and half a / precious metals fund, with lots of junior producers that will do very well if prices continue higher.

Hope this helps.

Related Blog Links
Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace

Related posts:

  1. Gold, Great for a Trade, Risky as an Investment
  2. Energy, Gold and BRICs
  3. Why Invest in Gold and Precious Metals?
  4. Is Reflation Policy Bullish for Gold? Unlikely
  5. Refuting the Arguments of Gold Bugs

Categories: Uncategorized
  1. No comments yet.
  1. No trackbacks yet.
CommentLuv Enabled

This site uses KeywordLuv. Enter YourName@YourKeywords in the Name field to take advantage.