Anyone else feeling the squeeze of inflation and looking
- •I’ve been eyeing the inflation numbers lately, and it’s honestly making me feel a bit uneasy.
- •I used to brush off the "inflation is coming" talk, but seeing the price of everything from gas to my favorite coffee spot just makes you think.
- •I’ve been researching Gold IRAs pretty heavily as a way to protect some of that capital ($400k range) from further erosion.
I’ve been eyeing the inflation numbers lately, and it’s honestly making me feel a bit uneasy. My tech stock portfolio has been great, but let's be real, a lot of it feels like paper gains when every trip to Safeway adds another ten bucks to the bill. I used to brush off the "inflation is coming" talk, but seeing the price of everything from gas to my favorite coffee spot just makes you think.
I left the startup grind in SoMa a couple years back, thankfully with enough runway to figure out my next moves, and now I'm actively diversifying out of pure equities. I’ve been researching Gold IRAs pretty heavily as a way to protect some of that capital ($400k range) from further erosion. The idea of having a tangible asset, something that historically holds its value when the dollar goes sideways, is really appealing right now. Used to think it was just for boomer conspiracy theorists, but the more I dig, the more it makes sense as a hedge.
My main question to this group is, how are you guys actually using gold as an inflation hedge? Are you going all-in on physical gold, or are you also looking at things like gold ETFs or even mining stocks? I’m leaning towards a direct custodian Gold IRA for physical delivery, but the storage fees are definitely a consideration. For those who've been in this game longer than I have, what are the blind spots I should be thinking about?
Also, given the current geopolitical climate and economic forecasts, does anyone think gold is actually underpriced right now, making it an even better entry point? Or are we potentially looking at a situation where inflation might cool off faster than expected, making other assets more attractive in the short term? Would love to hear some diverse perspectives on this.