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Gold's utility as a portfolio hedge is paradoxical: it stems from its uselessness. Because it's chemically inert and not consumed like industrial commodities (e.g., oil, copper), its value is less tied to the business cycle. This inertness gives it a naturally long duration and makes it a reliable defensive asset.
Despite short-term price choppiness driven by headline reactions and liquidity issues, the core conviction in gold comes from a simple structural imbalance. Fundamentally, demand is outpacing supply, making it a clean expression of investor preference for real assets.
Gold's value extends beyond being a simple inflation hedge; it also acts as a critical hedge against deflationary tail risks like a major credit event. Its recent rally is driven by a lack of other assets that can protect a portfolio from such extreme, contradictory outcomes, positioning it as unimpeachable collateral.
A stock with a negative beta moves opposite to the overall market. Investors intentionally use these assets, such as gold, as a hedge. When the broader market crashes, these investments are expected to rise in value, helping to offset losses elsewhere in a portfolio.
Contrary to common belief, substituting the bond allocation in a traditional 60/40 portfolio with gold has historically resulted in remarkably similar overall returns. This finding challenges the conventional wisdom that bonds are the only viable diversifier for equities and suggests gold can fulfill a similar portfolio-stabilizing function over the long term.
After initially selling off with other assets due to broad de-risking for liquidity, gold is beginning to reassert its safe-haven status. It has started rallying even as equities fall, suggesting the initial wave of forced selling has subsided, allowing its traditional negative correlation with risk assets to return.
Global central banks are buying gold not just as a hedge against the US dollar, but as a tacit admission of concern about the long-term value of all fiat currencies, including their own. This move signals a flight to a historical store of value amid fears of widespread currency devaluation.
For most of history, gold was simply money and offered minimal real returns (~0.4%). Since the global move to a fiat system in 1971, where currency is backed by nothing, gold has performed exceptionally well as an alternative to paper money.
Ray Dalio explains that gold's recent price surge isn't just driven by speculators. Major central banks are actively acquiring gold because they treat it as the second-largest global reserve currency, a stable alternative to fiat money in a period of geopolitical and economic instability.
Gold is a low-returning asset, similar to cash. Its primary value in a portfolio is not appreciation but diversification. During periods of stagflation or debt crises when other assets like stocks and bonds perform poorly, gold tends to do very well, stabilizing the portfolio.
The strategic value of commodities in a modern portfolio has shifted from generating returns to providing a crucial hedge against two growing threats. These are unsustainable fiscal policies that weaken currencies ('debasement risk') and the increasing use of commodities as geopolitical weapons that cause supply disruptions.