Wall Street Journal Proves It Doesn’t Understand Gold

August 14, 2021

Gold bugs should never assume that the mainstream investing community actually understands finance. That includes the Wall Street Journal, which recently published an article (Gold as an Inflation Hedge: What the Past 50 Years Teaches Us) purporting to show that gold does not protect against a depreciating currency.

The article begins with a couple of subheads…

On the anniversary of the metal’s unleashing by Nixon, gold’s believers may be disappointed by the record

Investors often think that gold is the answer to inflation. It’s not that simple, as the past 50 years have shown.

…and then attempts to prove those points graphically with a chart comparing gold to stocks and bonds:

 

Its conclusion? Pretty much everything has gone up since the US left the gold standard in 1971, and the things that went up most – stocks — are by definition the best “inflation hedges,” while bonds are just about as good as gold.

 

So what’s wrong with this argument? Simply put, gold is not an “investment”. It is money. You don’t own it in place of Amazon stock or Treasury bonds, you own it in place of the dollars that might otherwise be in your pocket, your bank account, or under your mattress. Here’s a picture that’s as clear as the previous one is obscure.


Two piles of dollars and coins. The one on the right is the amount that was required to buy an ounce of gold in 1920. The other, massive pile is the number of dollars it takes to buy an ounce of gold today. The upshot: gold has protected its owners’ purchasing power while the dollar has been depreciated to oblivion. That is the definition of “inflation hedge.”

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The 1849 Gold Rush sped up California's admission to the Union as the 31st state in that year.
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