Investing in Gold as World Economies Falter


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Are you a civilized individual or a Neanderthal? Berkshire Hathaway's Charlie Munger provides a simple litmus test... "Civilized people don't buy gold," says Munger.

There you have it. If you possess absolutely no gold, other than maybe a tooth filling, you are civilized. Congratulations!

If, however, you've stashed a few Krugerrands under your mattress, we've got some bad news for you. You are hopelessly uncivilized - a financial Neanderthal, deserving of pity from your civilized counterparts.

"I think gold is a great thing to sew into your garments if you're a Jewish family in Vienna in 1939," Munger remarked recently, "but I think civilized people don't buy gold. They invest in productive businesses."

Yes, that's right, Charlie. Civilized people invest in productive businesses...until an uncivilized government decides to steal it, or merely tax and regulate it into oblivion. Some Jews in Vienna in 1939 operated extremely productive businesses. Unfortunately, they could not stitch any of those into their garments.

In other words, Charlie, civilized investment strategies function in civilized societies. In uncivilized societies, gold is usually a better bet. Or to put it another way, as civilizations lose their civility, share prices fall and gold soars...which is exactly what has been happening here in our beloved US of A.

During the last decade and a half, the investment return of Berkshire Hathaway, perhaps the most civilized of American stocks, has trailed far behind that of gold. Civilized folks like Charlie Munger and Warren Buffett consider that 15-year trend a fluke. Maybe so. Or maybe this trend is a warning that America is becoming a bit less civilized - a bit less friendly to productive businesses.

Notwithstanding this trend, civilized folks know better. They shun gold in order to invest in the shares of overhyped social media companies, highly leveraged banks, bonds of bankrupt governments and complex derivatives that are impossible to value precisely... until they go to zero... at which point their precise value is known.

That, Dear Reader, is civilized!

But there is one additional echelon: the über-civilized investor. Über-civilized investors shun gold to invest in über-complex derivatives. These are the folks like Warren Buffett who do not merely shun gold, but also belittle it very publicly while loading up on highly leveraged finance companies that are loaded up on complex financial derivatives.

Often, these banks are run by über-über-civilized investors - the kinds of guys who do not merely load up on complex derivatives, they load up on complex derivatives linked to the bonds of bankrupt governments. Then they utilize a "risk control" methodology that has a perfect record of failing to control risk.

You just can't get any more civilized than that.

Regards,

Eric Fry
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

From the Archives...

The Physical Gold Market - From the Weak to the Strong
2012-05-18 - Greg Canavan

Why JP Morgan is Playing the Same Old Rigged Game
2012-05-17 - Eric Fry

Why Greece Can't Afford to Stay in the Euro
2012-05-16 - Dan Denning

A Big Oops at JP Morgan!
2012-05-15 - Dan Amoss

Preparing For China's Growth Slowdown With The 'Energy Hub' Portfolio
2012-04-14 - Dan Denning





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About the Author

Eric J. FryEric J. Fry has been a specialist in international equities since the early 1980s. He was a professional portfolio manager for more than 10 years, specializing in international investment strategies and short- selling. Mr. Fry launched the sometimes-abrasive, mostly entertaining and always insightful Rude Awakening.

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There Is 1 Response So Far. »

  1. And just like gold, Berkshire shares don't pay any dividends. I suppose the reason gold owners don't run around denigrating Berkshire owners as uncivilised nuts is that they can let the facts speak for themselves. Berkshire has been a poor investment versus gold.

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