ChapInTokyo wrote: ↑Sat May 25, 2024 11:47 pm
Interesting Nikkei interview with
Ray Dalio (the founder of hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, known for having applied lessons from history to predict the 2008 Great Financial collapse).
WOW if he’s right this time we could be in for a rough ride indeed… maybe I really ought to have a pretty large allocation to gold in my portfolio!
Q: How would turmoil in the U.S. affect the dollar?
A: There is too much debt that will be monetized, as is happening in Japan as well as the U.S. and the eurozone -- so in all three of the world's major reserve currencies -- which will devalue their monies and the debt assets, which are the promises to receive this devalued money. The devaluations will show up in more inflation and higher gold prices, rather than in one currency falling a lot relative to the others. In other words, the debt will be monetized, and the value of all monies will decline. I believe that will be the trend for several years.
https://asia.nikkei.com/Editor-s-Picks/ ... ion-looms2
You and I seem to be following the same trails, ha ha!
I listened to this podcast recently featuring Ray Dalio.
His comments on national debt (and labor shortages in the developed world) leading to inflation and higher rates, which lower bond prices if they keep rising after your purchase, made me rethink my bond allocation.
https://podcasts.apple.com/jp/podcast/p ... 0659610574
This is one of the best articles I have read on gold. The guy is pro-gold but does not push it hard. This quote stood out:
"Because real interest rates are affected by inflation, gold does indirectly protect against very sharp inflation that craters real rates. But it also can respond strongly even in times of low inflation as rates fall to particularly low levels like we’re experiencing today."
https://portfoliocharts.com/2020/08/21/ ... e-of-gold/
Apart from protecting against this particular type of inflation (not all inflation), adding some gold - not too much as it doesn't generate income, unlike bonds and stocks - can help diversify a portfolio and reduce volatility thanks to its reduced correlations with stocks and bonds.
https://youtu.be/D3KdiT3iFwo?si=ejDWA4EAO74uqw9G (the bit about diversification of asset types starts from about 9:30mins in)