π₯ 50% gold allocation is insane - Fight me
- β’Alright, let's get one thing straight, you "gold bugs" with your 50% allocation β you're living in a fantasy land.
- β’I see these posts, "safety net," "inflation hedge," and I just shake my head.
- β’50% of your hard-earned capital tied up in a shiny rock that generates absolutely ZERO return?
Alright, let's get one thing straight, you "gold bugs" with your 50% allocation β you're living in a fantasy land. I see these posts, "safety net," "inflation hedge," and I just shake my head. 50% of your hard-earned capital tied up in a shiny rock that generates absolutely ZERO return? Are you actively trying to sabotage your financial future, or are you just blissfully unaware of how money actually works in the 21st century?
I get it, your grandpa probably told you gold was the only real money. And sure, in 1930, when the world was literally burning down, maybe it made some sense. But we're not in the Great Depression anymore, folks! Look at the last decade. If you had 50% of your portfolio in gold from, say, 2011 to 2021, you were basically treading water while everyone else was swimming laps. The S&P 500, even after a few dips, delivered an average annual return north of 10% during that period. Meanwhile, gold, after hitting its 2011 peak around $1,900 an ounce, barely clawed its way back above that a decade later. You effectively lost 10 years of compounding growth for a "safe" asset that barely kept pace with inflation, let alone outpaced it consistently. It's a psychological crutch, not a sound investment strategy.
And don't even get me started on opportunity cost. That 50% you've locked away could be generating dividends, innovating in disruptive tech, or building real equity in a growing business. Instead, it's just sitting there, waiting for the sky to fall. When a financial advisor tells you to diversify, they don't mean put half your eggs in a basket that's only good if the entire global economy collapses. That's not diversification; that's paranoia. I've personally seen portfolios with a heavy gold bias underperform by tens of thousands of dollars over just 5-7 years compared to a more balanced, growth-oriented approach. So, tell me, where's the sense in that?
I'm not saying 0% gold, but 50%? You're actively hindering your wealth accumulation. Prove me wrong. Tell me exactly how a 50% gold allocation in today's market makes any shred of financial sense. Come on, fight me!