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.
The administration's explicit focus on re-shoring manufacturing and preparing for potential geopolitical conflict provides a clear investment playbook. Capital should flow towards commodities and companies critical to the military-industrial complex, such as producers of copper, steel, and rare earth metals.
The 60/40 portfolio is obsolete because bonds, laden with credit risk, no longer offer safety. A resilient modern portfolio requires a broader mix of uncorrelated assets: cash, gold, currencies, commodities like oil and food, and short-term government debt, while actively avoiding corporate credit.
Facing unprecedented government debt, a cycle of money printing and currency devaluation is likely. Investors should follow the lead of central banks, which are buying gold at record rates while holding fewer Treasury bonds, signaling a clear institutional strategy to own hard assets.
Having lived through hyperinflation where money became a meaningless number, the real store of value is owning productive assets. A portfolio of quality businesses that provide real goods and services offers tangible protection that fiat currency cannot, as these businesses can adapt and reprice.
Gold's historic link to US real yields broke after the US froze Russian reserves. This forced global central banks to reassess risk and buy gold regardless of price, creating a powerful new source of demand and structurally altering the market, a change now being followed by sovereign wealth funds.
Profitable companies act as a hedge against currency debasement. They issue long-term debt at low fixed rates, effectively shorting the currency. They then invest the proceeds into productive assets or their own stock, which tend to outperform inflation, benefiting shareholders.
Unlike Bitcoin, which sells off during liquidity crunches, gold is being bid up by sovereign nations. This divergence reflects a strategic shift by central banks away from US Treasuries following the sanctioning of Russia's reserves, viewing gold as the only true safe haven asset.
During episodes of US government dysfunction, such as shutdowns, the dollar tends to weaken against alternative reserve assets. The concurrent strength in gold and Bitcoin provides tangible market validation for the 'dollar debasement' thesis, suggesting investors are actively seeking havens from perceived fiscal mismanagement.
To navigate an era of government debt overwhelming monetary policy, investor Lynn Alden proposes a specific three-pillar portfolio. It allocates 50% to profitable equities, 20% to cash for optionality, and a significant 30% to inflation-hedging hard assets like commodities, precious metals, and Bitcoin.
The official NBER designation of a recession is less critical for commodity performance than the surrounding macro environment. For instance, the 1998 currency crisis crushed returns without a formal recession, while Chinese stimulus in 2008 caused a commodity melt-up during the GFC.