π₯ Gold IRAs are overrated for millennials - Change my mind
- β’Gold IRAs for millennials
- β’5.5% over the last 50 years
- β’10-12% annually
Alright, let's cut through the BS that's being shilled to my generation. I'm seeing way too many "financial gurus" out there pushing Gold IRAs for millennials, and frankly, I think it's a load of overpriced, underperforming garbage. Seriously, change my mind, because right now I'm convinced it's a boomer-era relic that has no place in a truly aggressive, growth-oriented millennial portfolio.
Here's my hot take: Are we really going to trust an asset that's seen a measly average annual return of around 5.5% over the last 50 years to build wealth for retirement? That's barely keeping pace with inflation, people! Meanwhile, the S&P 500, even with its ups and downs, has delivered closer to 10-12% annually over similar long periods. We're talking about a difference of potentially hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars over a 30-40 year investing horizon. I don't need a gold bar in my vault, I need a portfolio that's going to outrun the cost of living and actually allow me to retire before I'm 75. My buddy, Mark, diversified into tech stocks back in 2010 with just $5,000; that's now worth over $40,000. You think a gold IRA would've done that?
And let's not even get started on the fees! The setup costs, storage fees, insurance β it all eats into those already pathetic returns. For a generation that's already facing student loan debt averaging over $30,000 per person and an increasingly unaffordable housing market, every single dollar needs to work as hard as possible. Locking a significant portion of our retirement savings into a non-income-producing asset that charges us just to hold it seems, to me, like financial suicide. Prove me wrong. Show me how a Gold IRA is a smarter move than a diversified fund for a millennial aiming for financial freedom. Seriously, convince me I'm wrong and that I should be pouring my hard-earned cash into shiny rocks instead of actual growth.