This is one.Love you gold !
Now how do we string several of these love days together ?

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Apparently my recollection was wrong. I went back and looked at my spreadsheet for 12/31/2013 and I have $1205 as the Kitco closing price that day. So with the close yesterday of 1178 it's down about 2.2% YTD.upside wrote:Tech, I've seen you use that $1180 figure a couple times now. I believe that's incorrect. The final spot for physical in 2013 was above $1200.Libertarian666 wrote:I have gold down less than 1/2% for the year at present, since my records show that the last print for physical in 2013 was $1180. So one more day like this and it will be up almost 3% for the year.Lowe wrote: Yeah, just one or two more days just like this... and gold will be back to 0% YTD.
The gods demand a sacrificeannieB wrote: There are days that we just have to give some love to the gold gods.
This is one.Love you gold !
Now how do we string several of these love days together ?
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There is no god...dragoncar wrote:The gods demand a sacrificeannieB wrote: There are days that we just have to give some love to the gold gods.
This is one.Love you gold !
Now how do we string several of these love days together ?
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No, no, no. The PP is like a student that gets average grades but becomes the most reliable, indispensable plumber in town.buddtholomew wrote: The PP is like a student that gets D's on all of his tests and then gets an A on the final exam to average a C+. Down, down, down, and then an up day to squash the shorts. It's going to give everything back from Friday. Garbage.
That was my approach in college. I called it gyroscopic education.buddtholomew wrote:There is no god...dragoncar wrote:The gods demand a sacrificeannieB wrote: There are days that we just have to give some love to the gold gods.
This is one.Love you gold !
Now how do we string several of these love days together ?
![]()
The PP is like a student that gets D's on all of his tests and then gets an A on the final exam to average a C+. Down, down, down, and then an up day to squash the shorts. It's going to give everything back from Friday. Garbage.
And for even more perspective, it's up 6.6% this year when there's basically no meaningful inflation.Tyler wrote: For perspective, the PP is down 0.7% today. Maybe I missed the accompanying fire and brimstone.
Not 100% accurate, but a great analogy nonetheless.buddtholomew wrote:
There is no god...
The PP is like a student that gets D's on all of his tests and then gets an A on the final exam to average a C+. Down, down, down, and then an up day to squash the shorts. It's going to give everything back from Friday. Garbage.
Wait, wait, wait: you seem to have a hate-love-hate and mostly-hate relationship with gold (and actually, I haven't seen the love from you ever) but you have 100% of your Variable Portfolio in Gold Miners?buddtholomew wrote:100% of my variable portfolio is in GDX as well. I almost need a 100% return to breakeven. Feel completely trapped, but will only purchase additional lots if re-balancing bands are breached. I am well within tolerances after averaging down. Sad to be honest.portart wrote: My Variable is all in GDX and GDXJ. Still holding but losing money in hard bunches. I know a way to get it to reverse...sell it.
-- http://gyroscopicinvesting.com/forum/pe ... #msg103799buddtholomew wrote:I sold a portion of GLD in taxable to TLH, invested some of the proceeds in VEU (All-World ex-US) and the balance in Cash on 9/15.
PP Allocation: 30% equities (90% SPY, 10% VEU), 20% GLD, 25% TLT and 25% Cash. I am comfortable with this allocation and expect to hold indefinitely. Surprising what a 5% difference (GLD to VEU) can achieve for your peace of mind.
Retirement Assets: BH Portfolio 65/35/5 equities, fixed income, precious metals and mining (GDX)LC475 wrote:Wait, wait, wait: you seem to have a hate-love-hate and mostly-hate relationship with gold (and actually, I haven't seen the love from you ever) but you have 100% of your Variable Portfolio in Gold Miners?buddtholomew wrote:100% of my variable portfolio is in GDX as well. I almost need a 100% return to breakeven. Feel completely trapped, but will only purchase additional lots if re-balancing bands are breached. I am well within tolerances after averaging down. Sad to be honest.portart wrote: My Variable is all in GDX and GDXJ. Still holding but losing money in hard bunches. I know a way to get it to reverse...sell it.![]()
I think I have misunderstood you entirely. I am very confused by this.
You reduced the amount of gold in your Permanent Portfolio to 20% due to your discomfort with it, and reported feeling much better.-- http://gyroscopicinvesting.com/forum/pe ... #msg103799buddtholomew wrote:I sold a portion of GLD in taxable to TLH, invested some of the proceeds in VEU (All-World ex-US) and the balance in Cash on 9/15.
PP Allocation: 30% equities (90% SPY, 10% VEU), 20% GLD, 25% TLT and 25% Cash. I am comfortable with this allocation and expect to hold indefinitely. Surprising what a 5% difference (GLD to VEU) can achieve for your peace of mind.
But while you are uncomfortable with gold, you at the same time are speculating that gold miners will do great -- and speculating on that with all of your speculative funds? Shouldn't you be uncomfortable with gold miners as well? I mean, I'm not trying to tell you you're wrong or what to think, but the price of gold and the fortunes of gold miners are generally considered to be related. But clearly you have some dissension from that view and perhaps some interesting thoughts of your own, reasons for allocating this way, and I'd be interested to hear them.
Are you fracking serious?!!buddtholomew wrote: Whatever! Worst mistake I ever made was finding out about this portfolio. I'm done here for a while. There's nothing magical about this portfolio and the sooner you realize that, the better off you will be.
Budd,buddtholomew wrote: Whatever! Worst mistake I ever made was finding out about this portfolio. I'm done here for a while. There's nothing magical about this portfolio and the sooner you realize that, the better off you will be.
Conventional BH wisdom and their perspective on gold has been accurate for me personally. I have not witnessed the value gold provides in a well diverisifed portfolio of stocks, bonds and cash. Sorry.MachineGhost wrote:Are you fracking serious?!!buddtholomew wrote: Whatever! Worst mistake I ever made was finding out about this portfolio. I'm done here for a while. There's nothing magical about this portfolio and the sooner you realize that, the better off you will be.
Clearly you did your research before investing in the PP and saw long gold bear markets in its backtested history. It's not like the price action should be a surprise given the current economic conditions. Strong dollar, no inflation, improving economy, stocks at all time highs - and yet you are miserable with your portfolio. That sucks.buddtholomew wrote: Conventional BH wisdom and their perspective on gold has been accurate for me personally. I have not witnessed the value gold provides in a well diverisifed portfolio of stocks, bonds and cash. Sorry.
I suppose that I fall into the crowd that believed rampant inflation (QE) would erode my savings and gold was the only means to protect my wealth. Some see the glass as half full - PP up YTD, but I see it as half empty - the lost opportunity of allocating a significant sum to an asset that has blown up in my face.iwealth wrote:Clearly you did your research before investing in the PP and saw long gold bear markets in its backtested history. It's not like the price action should be a surprise given the current economic conditions. Strong dollar, no inflation, improving economy, stocks at all time highs - and yet you are miserable with your portfolio. That sucks.buddtholomew wrote: Conventional BH wisdom and their perspective on gold has been accurate for me personally. I have not witnessed the value gold provides in a well diverisifed portfolio of stocks, bonds and cash. Sorry.
I know you were just venting but to stick with anything in life you refer to as the "worst mistake I ever made" seems very counterproductive.
Thanks! Hmm, that makes some sense. But why have the GDX at all? It's not part of the Permanent Portfolio. It doesn't correspond to any economic condition. And... it's gold-related, which, why would you want more of that?buddtholomew wrote: Retirement Assets: BH Portfolio 65/35/5 equities, fixed income, precious metals and mining (GDX)
Taxable Assets: HBPP 4x25 + 3% in GDX to re-balance the 5% in retirement assets. I can't buy GDX any other way. Brokerage window does not allow.
Total Assets: 50/40/10 equities, fixed income, GLD and GDX
Hope this clears the ambiguity. Like you said, I have a love-hate relationship with gold, but I've never felt the love...
I previously had an allocation to VGPMX and switched to GDX in retirement accounts (rollover) when management left and the prospectus changed. I am since down 30+% and rebalanced to 5% of portfolio recently as bands were breached. I now own an additional batch in taxable at 3% of total.LC475 wrote:Thanks! Hmm, that makes some sense. But why have the GDX at all? It's not part of the Permanent Portfolio. It doesn't correspond to any economic condition. And... it's gold-related, which, why would you want more of that?buddtholomew wrote: Retirement Assets: BH Portfolio 65/35/5 equities, fixed income, precious metals and mining (GDX)
Taxable Assets: HBPP 4x25 + 3% in GDX to re-balance the 5% in retirement assets. I can't buy GDX any other way. Brokerage window does not allow.
Total Assets: 50/40/10 equities, fixed income, GLD and GDX
Hope this clears the ambiguity. Like you said, I have a love-hate relationship with gold, but I've never felt the love...
Why not just ditch the GDX entirely, both in the "BH" portfolio and in the taxable assets?
Just trying to understand the thought process, because I still don't get it.
Well, if you think the prospects for GDX are not good, by selling it while down 30% you are not locking in losses, don't look at it that way; rather, you are getting out in the nick of time, escaping greater losses.buddtholomew wrote: I previously had an allocation to VGPMX and switched to GDX in retirement accounts (rollover) when management left and the prospectus changed. I am since down 30+% and rebalanced to 5% of portfolio recently as bands were breached. I now own an additional batch in taxable at 3% of total.
I dont want to sell down 30% and lock in losses.
But QE hasn't resulted in rampant inflation. Inflation is near zero. I used to believe this stuff too, but all the predictions have been 100% wrong for quite a few years. People who put huge amounts of money in gold have lost big time. I'm no gold bug; the only reason why I do is because it's in the PP and I appreciate its role in conjunction with other assets, but alone... not great, I don't think.buddtholomew wrote: I suppose that I fall into the crowd that believed rampant inflation (QE) would erode my savings and gold was the only means to protect my wealth.
This strikes me as a terribly stressful way to view your investments. Unless you happened to choose the best asset this year, you've always lost the opportunity to put more of your money into it. But agonizing over your failure to anticipate the future seems to be a sure way to make yourself permanently miserable, since the investing future is always unknowable and the nature of hedging your bets means that the assets you're holding that aren't this year's winners always look like stinkers. That is simply the way of the PP--and most diversified investment portfolios, for that matter. When gold is going up, it will be because stocks are blowing up in your face, for example. The very nature of holding multiple uncorrelated highly volatile assets means that one is probably always making you feel sick, if looking at individual assets in your portfolio falling makes you feel sick.buddtholomew wrote: Some see the glass as half full - PP up YTD, but I see it as half empty - the lost opportunity of allocating a significant sum to an asset that has blown up in my face.