Ever wonder how gold has actually performed since the Bretton Woods system collapsed in 1971?
Here's the kicker: gold delivered a solid 4.9% inflation-adjusted CAGR over the past five decades. That's nearly double what bonds could manage in the same timeframe. Meanwhile, holding cash? Basically a wealth eraser when you factor in inflation and taxes.
This historical performance gap tells you something interesting about portfolio diversification. While most investors were chasing traditional fixed-income returns, real wealth preservation happened through tangible assets and alternative holdings. The lesson here isn't just about gold—it's about recognizing that conventional wisdom on asset allocation might need some serious rethinking, especially in volatile macro environments.
Think about what this means for your own allocation strategy.
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MeaninglessGwei
· 22h ago
4.9% CAGR sounds good, but gold prices have also experienced crashes over the past 50 years. Can you really sleep well at night?
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ForkMonger
· 22h ago
lol bonds getting absolutely demolished by gold for 50 years and nobody wants to talk about it? classic institutional complacency. the real game was always about exploiting the governance failures of fiat itself
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SignatureCollector
· 22h ago
The performance of gold over the past 50 years has indeed been impressive, and bonds are simply no comparison.
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GateUser-9f682d4c
· 22h ago
Gold's 50-year real return of 4.9%, leaving bonds on the sidelines... Cash is even more out of the question, a guaranteed wealth shrinkage machine
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ProofOfNothing
· 22h ago
Wow, a 4.9% annualized return? Bonds are getting completely beaten down.
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FrontRunFighter
· 22h ago
nah they always conveniently forget how gold got suppressed through the whole 70s-80s cycle... the real dark forest is watching institutional players frontrun these "historical performance" narratives right before they dump bags on retail
Ever wonder how gold has actually performed since the Bretton Woods system collapsed in 1971?
Here's the kicker: gold delivered a solid 4.9% inflation-adjusted CAGR over the past five decades. That's nearly double what bonds could manage in the same timeframe. Meanwhile, holding cash? Basically a wealth eraser when you factor in inflation and taxes.
This historical performance gap tells you something interesting about portfolio diversification. While most investors were chasing traditional fixed-income returns, real wealth preservation happened through tangible assets and alternative holdings. The lesson here isn't just about gold—it's about recognizing that conventional wisdom on asset allocation might need some serious rethinking, especially in volatile macro environments.
Think about what this means for your own allocation strategy.