helmuth_hubener
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2007
- Messages
- 9,484
Oh, sorry, I missed it, HB! Thanks for re-asking; sorry to make you have to.Now that you've bumped this, could you reply plz to the question I posed immediately before your bump?
Thnx.

Your question is whether I agree that "if even just 90% is gold, the purchasing power and stability long term would make up for it". It depends what you mean by that. I do agree that whatever a 100% gold account would be doing, a 90% gold account is going to be doing something very similar, long-term. So yes, the purchasing power and stability of 90% gold 10% cash is going to be very close to the purchasing power and stability of 100% gold.
I do think that you need to be aware, however, that gold is not necessarily going to be more stable in terms of purchasing power than other assets, at least in the short and medium term. If you look at a chart of gold over the past year or even over ten, you will see that it's been quite volatile in terms of the dollar. Now, you could say that really it's the dollar that's been volatile in terms of gold, and that would be a fair point. Nevertheless, it means that your purchasing power to buy products with US dollar-denominated prices has fluctuated a great deal.
Over the last twenty years, and even over the last ten years, that fluctuation has very much been in gold's favor. The ounce of gold that could buy you about $350 dollar's-worth of goods in 1995 could buy you more like $450 in 2005 and more like $1,100 today. But shorter-term can be different. This past 12 months, for example, gold has fallen by about 10% against the dollar.
I just want you to be aware of the risks and realities. If you had a gold-denominated account linked to a debit card that you were using for all your financial needs as your main every-day payment card, you would have to be aware that you may deposit a paycheck worth $578.00 one day, and a week later -- without spending anything -- your account balance may be just $500. Or it could be $650. That would be an especially volatile week, but not unheard of in the gold market. You would, of course, still have the .5 ounces or so just exactly the same as when you deposited it. So in terms of gold, it would remain unchanged. With the 90% gold card I'm floating the idea of, the gain/loss would be dampened slightly: about $507/$643 instead of $500/$650.
Because of this volatility, you would need to have some amount of cushion, some amount of savings that is, so that the day-to-day volatility doesn't mess up your finances and make it difficult to pay your bills. You can't be living totally paycheck-to-paycheck. You have to have some savings, I'd say at minimum a month's worth (two would be better), and be regularly saving, say 10% of your income. That would mean your expenses are 10% less than your income. That would put you on sound enough financial footing to get such a card, otherwise I would not be comfortable recommending it.
What do you think? Still interested?


