You don't count I Bonds for the gold portion because you don't want to trust that I Bond rates are going to track inflation. Gold also provides diversification benefits that I Bonds (or any other bond) can't match. Gold is mostly politician-proof, while any government issued bond is obviously very vulnerable to damage from delusional politicans.1NV35T0R wrote: Getting back to the OP, I was pondering as usual about things.
I was wondering since the PP is based around economic conditions (recession, inflation, etc.) and I Bonds provide to a certain degree inflation protection, should they be counted 100% as the cash portion? They are U.S. government backed and nonvolatile like cash should be and can be liquidated if needed for various expenses. If they have this inflation portion to them though, would you considered them as 50% cash and 50% gold portion or the portfolio?
You do want I Bonds for the cash portion because I Bonds are virtually always going to provide a better return than 12 month t-bills, plus the interest is fully tax deferred until redemption (which can be 30 years or longer). The bonds stop accruing interest after 30 years, but that doesn't mean you have to cash them in at that time--you can wait if you want to.