On Gold

When I began my investment career forty years ago, the price of gold was $800 an ounce and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was at $800. Today gold is a little under $2,000 an ounce and the Dow is at 28,000. Stocks, by any measure, are the clear winner.

Every decade or so, gold and other commodities have a flurry of activity and a brief price run. Traders periodically jump in and we hear people spouting theories about how paper money has no backing and only physical things have value.

Admittedly, stocks are an abstract concept and every once in a while we need a reminder of what they are. Stocks are a fractional ownership in a company. If you buy a mutual fund you have a fractional ownership of a fund that has a fractional ownership in these companies. If you own an S&P 500 index fund you have a stake in 500 of the biggest and best companies in the history of man.

What do you have with gold? You have a shiny object that has tantalized man for thousands of years and held value since prehistoric times. Should investors avoid gold? Not necessarily. If one loves shiny objects, by all means indulge. But as a repository for your life savings? Not for me and I would suggest not for most others.

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