Gold Should be Viewed as Money — Not as an Investment Instrument
An interesting article. Check it out.
CYA: SE:
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by: Thorsten Polleit
On May 4 and 5, 2018, Warren E. Buffett (born 1930) and Charles T. Munger (born 1924), both already legends during their lifetime, held the annual shareholders’ meeting of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Approximately 42,000 visitors gathered in Omaha, Nebraska, to attend the star investors’ Q&A session.
Buffett compared the investment performance of 
corporate stocks (productive assets) with that of gold (representing 
unproductive assets). USD 10,000 invested in gold in 1942 would have 
appreciated to a mere USD 400,000, Buffett said – considerably less than
 a stock investment. What do you make of this comparison?

This
 way, gold can help boost the return on investment. Inspired by 
Buffett’s return comparison between stocks and gold, and after giving it
 some further thought, one might have good reasons to come to at least 
the following conclusion: Gold has proven to be the better money, it has
 proven itself to be a better store of value than the US dollar or other
 fiat currencies.
CYA: SE:
***************************************
by: Thorsten Polleit
On May 4 and 5, 2018, Warren E. Buffett (born 1930) and Charles T. Munger (born 1924), both already legends during their lifetime, held the annual shareholders’ meeting of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Approximately 42,000 visitors gathered in Omaha, Nebraska, to attend the star investors’ Q&A session.
Peoples’ enthusiasm is understandable: From 1965 to 
2017, Buffett’s Berkshire share achieved an annual average return of 
20.9 percent (after tax), while the S&P 500 returned only 9.9 
percent (before taxes). Had you invested in Berkshire in 1965, today you
 would be pleased to see a total return of 2,404,784 percent: an 
investment of USD 1,000 turned into more than USD 24 million (USD 
24,048,480, to be exact).
In his introductory words, Buffett pointed out how 
important the long-term view is to achieving investment success. For 
example, had you invested USD 10,000 in 1942 (the year Buffett bought 
his first share) in a broad basket of US equities and had patiently 
stood by that decision, you would now own stocks with a market value of 
USD 51 million.
With this example, Buffett also reminded the audience
 that investments in productive assets such as stocks can considerably 
gain in value over time; because in a market economy, companies 
typically generate a positive return on the capital employed. The 
profits go to the shareholders either as dividends or are reinvested by 
the company, in which case the shareholder benefits from the compound 
interest effect.

To answer this question, we first need to understand 
what gold is from the investor’s point of view. Gold can be classified 
as (I) an asset, (II) a commodity, or (III) money. If you consider gold 
to be an asset or a commodity, you might indeed raise the question as to
 whether you should keep the yellow metal in your investment portfolio.
But when gold is seen as a form of money, Buffett’s 
comparison of the performance of stocks and gold misses the point. To 
explain, every investor has to make the following decisions: (1) I have 
investible funds, and I have to decide how much of it I invest (e.g. in 
stocks, bonds, houses, etc.), and how much of it I keep in liquid assets
 (cash). (2) Once I have decided to keep X percent in cash, I have to determine which currency to choose: US dollar, euro, Japanese yen, Swiss franc – or “gold money”.
If one agrees with these considerations, one can 
arrive now at two conclusions: (1) I do not keep cash, because stocks 
offer a higher return than cash. However, many people are unlikely to 
follow such a recommendation. They keep at least some liquidity because 
they have financial obligations to meet.
People typically also wish to hold liquid means as a 
back-up for unforeseen events in the form of money. Money is the most 
liquid, most marketable “good”. Anyone who has money can exchange it at 
any time – and thus take advantage of investment opportunities that come
 up along the way.
(2) I decide to keep at least some cash. Anyone who 
has near-term payment obligations in, for example, US dollar, is well 
advised to keep sufficient funds in US dollar. Those who opt for holding
 money for unexpected liquidity requirements, or for longer-term 
liquidity needs, must decide what type of money is suitable for this 
purpose. One way to do this is to form an opinion about the respective 
currency’s purchasing power.
If Buffett shared this view, a comparison between the
 purchasing power of the US dollar and gold would be in order. This 
exercise would show that gold – in sharp contrast to the US dollar – has
 not only preserved its purchasing power over the past decades but even 
increased it.
The Greenback’s purchasing power has dropped
 by 84 percent from January 1972 to March 2018. Even taking a short-term
 interest rate into account, the US dollar’s purchasing power would show
 an increase of no more than 47 percent. The purchasing power of gold, 
in contrast, has grown by 394 percent.
The yellow metal has also a remarkable property that 
has become increasingly important for investors in recent years. The 
reason? The international fiat money system is getting into increasingly
 tricky waters – mainly because the world’s already dizzyingly high 
level of debt continues to rise. An investor is exposed to risks that 
have not existed in the decades before. Gold can help to deal with these
 risks.
Unlike fiat money, gold cannot be devalued by central
 bank monetary policy. It is immune against the printing of ever greater
 amounts of money. Furthermore, gold does not carry a risk of default, 
or a counterparty risk: Bank deposits and short-term debt securities may
 be destroyed by bankruptcies or debt relief. However, none of this 
applies to gold: its market value cannot drop to zero.
These two features – protection against currency 
devaluation and payment default – explain why people have opted, 
whenever they had the freedom to choose, for gold as their preferred 
money. Another important aspect at this point: In times of crisis, the 
holder of gold – if he or she has not bought it at too high a price – 
can have the hope that the value of gold is likely to increase and he or
 she can exchange gold for, for instance, shares at a significantly 
discounted price 
This
 way, gold can help boost the return on investment. Inspired by 
Buffett’s return comparison between stocks and gold, and after giving it
 some further thought, one might have good reasons to come to at least 
the following conclusion: Gold has proven to be the better money, it has
 proven itself to be a better store of value than the US dollar or other
 fiat currencies.
The two-star investors typically do beat around the 
bush when it comes to critical comments. For instance, Buffett told his 
audience once again that US Treasury bonds are a terrible investment for
 long-term investors. With a yield of currently 3 percent for ten-year 
US Treasury bonds, the return after tax is around 2.5 percent. With 
consumer price inflation currently around two percent, 
inflation-adjusted rate of return is just 0.5 percent. Buffett’s message
 was unequivocal: do not invest, at least not currently, in bonds.
Those who had hoped that the star investor would make
 further critical comments on the deep-seated problems of the US dollar –
 which represents a fiat currency with a money supply that can be 
increased any time in any amount considered politically expedient – had 
hoped in vain. But it cannot have escaped the star investors that it’s 
not all sunshine and roses when it comes to the fiat US dollar.
Munger, for example, bluntly stated that central 
banks’ low interest rate policies, in response to the 2008/2009 
financial crisis, have helped boost stock prices and bring shareholders 
windfall profits. Quote Munger in this context: “We are all a bunch of 
undeserving people, and I hope we continue to be so”.
Buffett and Munger share a long-term perspective. 
They keep pointing to the enormous increase in income that has been 
achieved in the US over the last decades. Compared to Buffett’s 
childhood days, Americans’ per capita income has increased six-fold – a 
most remarkable development (especially so if we factor in that the US 
population has grown from 123 million in 1930 to 323 million in 2016).
From Buffett’s and Munger’s point of view, the US 
system works, both politically and economically: Everyone has benefited,
 the wealth growth of Americans has been much more substantial than for 
people elsewhere, and crises have been overcome. The two investors thus 
form their assessment – as many do nowadays – on factual findings, based on what the eye can see. Counterfactual outcomes – things that would have happened had a different course of action been chosen – are left out.
If one takes a factual point of view, however, it is 
rather difficult to see the dark side of fiat money. For instance, that 
fiat money fuels an incessant expansion of the state to the detriment of
 civil liberties; the increase of aggressive interventions around the 
world, all the wars causing the deaths of millions; the economic and 
financial crises with their adverse effects on income and living 
conditions of many people; and last but not least, the socially unjust 
distribution of income and wealth.
All these bad things would undoubtedly be unthinkable
 under a gold-backed US dollar, at least to their current extent. The 
objection that the increase in the wealth of the past few decades would 
have been impossible without a fiat US dollar does not hold water: 
Economically speaking, it is wrong to think that an increase in the 
quantity of money, or a politically motivated lowering of the interest 
rate, could create prosperity.
If that were the case, why not increase the quantity 
of money ten-, hundred-, or thousand-fold right now and thereby 
eradicate poverty worldwide? If zero interest rate could create wealth, 
why not order central banks to push all interest rates down to 
zero immediately? Why not enact a new law that requires zero percent 
interest, or abolishes it altogether?
Buffett and Munger have undoubtedly given their 
shareholders a great opportunity to escape the vagaries of the fiat 
money system, to defend themselves against the central bank-induced 
inflation, and to also become wealthy. Unfortunately, however, the 
serious economic, social, and political problems that fiat money 
inflicts upon societies cannot be solved this way.
For that reason, one should deliberately reflect 
Buffett’s return comparison between stocks and gold – and make oneself 
aware of the fact that gold can be viewed as a form of money that may 
even deserve to be called “the ultimate means of payment.” For the 
investor, there are no convincing economic reasons to discourage holding
 gold as a form of longer-term liquid funds – especially if the 
alternative is fiat money.
This timeless insight was already suggested by 
economist Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973) in 1940: “The gold currency has 
been criticised for various reasons; it has been reproached for not 
being perfect. But nobody is in a position to tell us how something more
 satisfactory couId be put in place of the gold currency.”
One bad chapter doesn't mean your story is over.capitalstars13
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