π₯ Boomers are hoarding gold and hurting younger investors
- β’Let's be brutally honest here, folks.
- β’The narrative that gold is a "safe haven" is a boomer-fueled myth designed to protect their generational wealth at the expense of everyone else.
- β’Iβm calling it now: Boomers are hoarding gold and actively hurting younger investors .
Let's be brutally honest here, folks. The narrative that gold is a "safe haven" is a boomer-fueled myth designed to protect their generational wealth at the expense of everyone else. Iβm calling it now: Boomers are hoarding gold and actively hurting younger investors. This isn't some nuanced take; it's a cold, hard fact that we need to confront.
Think about it. While younger generations are struggling with crippling student debt, an unaffordable housing market with average home prices up over 40% since 2020 in many areas, and stagnant wages, what are the boomers doing? They're piling into physical gold. Iβve personally seen my retired uncle brag about his six-figure gold stash, bought when gold was dirt cheap in the 1990s, while I'm here trying to figure out how to scrape together a down payment. This isn't anecdotal; gold demand hit a 10-year high in 2022, driven largely by retail investors and central banks, many of whom are guided by the same old-school "inflation hedge" mentality that boomers hold so dear. This isn't just a quaint hobby; it's capital being funneled into a non-productive asset that could otherwise be fueling innovation, growth, and real opportunities for the future.
Every dollar pumped into gold is a dollar not invested in companies creating jobs, developing new technologies, or building sustainable infrastructure. Itβs a dead-end investment that offers no dividends, no innovation, just a shiny rock that sits there. And who benefits from this stagnation? The generation that already owns everything! They've had their run; they've built their empires. Now, they're pulling up the ladder, creating artificial scarcity, and driving up the price of an asset that offers zero intrinsic value, making it even harder for younger investors to find truly productive avenues for their limited capital. It's a selfish, backward-looking strategy that starves the real economy of vital investment.
So, here's my challenge: Convince me I'm wrong. Tell me how this gold obsession isn't a massive generational wealth transfer in reverse, suffocating the financial prospects of anyone under 40. Iβm ready for the debate.