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Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:56 pm
by Smith1776
Tortoise wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:52 pm
Agreed. But in that case, what you end up with isn't really a PP anymore -- it's just physical gold. I.e., the hyperinflation transforms the PP into ~100% physical gold, and after that happens it's technically not a PP anymore.
True. I suppose you'd have to make your own judgement about when it was safe to get out of the 100% gold lifeboat and back into the traditional PP. Something that I'm sure would not be easy to do in real time.
Edit: Potential solution. After the crisis is over, let's assume some degree of regular commerce reappears and the person in question has a job. That person resumes accumulation of savings upon first paycheque and puts their assets equally into stocks, bonds, and cash but
not into gold. The investor then only adds to the gold portion when the dollar value of the other 3 assets has "caught up." This might be a workable policy.
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:57 pm
by Libertarian666
Tortoise wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:52 pm
Smith1776 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 4:52 pm
But if you follow something like the 50-50 digital/physical divide and never sell the physical you should be okay. Just a minor modification.
Agreed. But in that case, what you end up with isn't really a PP anymore -- it's just physical gold. I.e., the hyperinflation transforms the PP into ~100% physical gold, and after that happens it's technically not a PP anymore.
Right, it's composed only of the most valuable type of financial asset anyone could own.

Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:58 pm
by Libertarian666
Smith1776 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:56 pm
Tortoise wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:52 pm
Agreed. But in that case, what you end up with isn't really a PP anymore -- it's just physical gold. I.e., the hyperinflation transforms the PP into ~100% physical gold, and after that happens it's technically not a PP anymore.
True. I suppose you'd have to make your own judgement about when it was safe to get out of the 100% gold lifeboat and back into the traditional PP. Something that I'm sure would not be easy to do in real time.
When an ounce of gold will buy a luxury automobile, go right ahead.

Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2020 6:02 pm
by Smith1776
Libertarian666 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:58 pm
When an ounce of gold will buy a luxury automobile, go right ahead.
I had a friend in college whose parents owned a sewing machine factory in Taiwan. They were
seriously rich. The guy owned a Mercedes Benz SLK350 and let other people drive it on a whim. I never knew driving could be so fun.
Something like that'd be my first purchase.

Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2020 6:03 pm
by Tortoise
Libertarian666 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:54 pm
I've read all of his books and even met him several times.
Very cool!
Libertarian666 wrote:
He did think about hyperinflation and recommended the purchase of a bag of junk silver coins against that eventuality. It would be pretty hard to get change for even a small gold coin in such circumstances; its buying power would be too great for hand-to-hand use.
Heck, even today a 1/20th ounce coin is worth $75 or so, and in a hyperinflation it might have 10x the purchasing power. Not to mention being a robbery risk.
Despite being a Harry Browne fan, I always found the notion of junk silver to be kind of odd.
If I were some random person who had minimal experience with precious metals, and someone handed me a piece of junk silver and told me it's 65% silver, I'm not sure if I would trust him. And even if I did, I'd need to weigh the coin on a scale or look it up on the Internet to figure out how many ounces of pure silver that translates into.
I don't know, maybe I'm just overthinking it, and in a real-world scenario people would willing trade in junk silver without having to use calculators and scales.
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2020 6:15 pm
by mathjak107
Today I did a favor for the owner of the deli next door to the studio I play in and he gave me 12 rolls of toilet paper .....what a crazy barter ....
Now I am thinking of putting them on Craig’s list and swap for 3 bedroom house
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2020 6:25 pm
by Libertarian666
Tortoise wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 6:03 pm
Libertarian666 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:54 pm
I've read all of his books and even met him several times.
Very cool!
Libertarian666 wrote:
He did think about hyperinflation and recommended the purchase of a bag of junk silver coins against that eventuality. It would be pretty hard to get change for even a small gold coin in such circumstances; its buying power would be too great for hand-to-hand use.
Heck, even today a 1/20th ounce coin is worth $75 or so, and in a hyperinflation it might have 10x the purchasing power. Not to mention being a robbery risk.
Despite being a Harry Browne fan, I always found the notion of junk silver to be kind of odd.
If I were some random person who had minimal experience with precious metals, and someone handed me a piece of junk silver and told me it's 65% silver, I'm not sure if I would trust him. And even if I did, I'd need to weigh the coin on a scale or look it up on the Internet to figure out how many ounces of pure silver that translates into.
I don't know, maybe I'm just overthinking it, and in a real-world scenario people would willing trade in junk silver without having to use calculators and scales.
They won't need the scales very long. Someone will recognize the coins and they will reach general acceptability pretty quickly.
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2020 8:54 pm
by dualstow
Libertarian666 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:57 pm
Tortoise wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:52 pm
Smith1776 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 4:52 pm
But if you follow something like the 50-50 digital/physical divide and never sell the physical you should be okay. Just a minor modification.
Agreed. But in that case, what you end up with isn't really a PP anymore -- it's just physical gold. I.e., the hyperinflation transforms the PP into ~100% physical gold, and after that happens it's technically not a PP anymore.
Right, it's composed only of the most valuable type of financial asset anyone could own.
Gold is so weird. Figuring it out is chimeric. The attacks on it are well known: young people like bitcoin; maybe one day we'll synthesize gold; "it doesn't produce anything." It's not a bet on prosperity.
However, one thing I really love about it is that it doesn't change. Right now, we can't synthesize it. We can't print it or magically conjure more out of digital thin air. We can only try to extract more. There is no manager risk. There is no brilliant CEO who is going to be caught having relations with an employee and who will subsequently be forced out. There is no genius at the helm who has the company's worth tied up with his health, longevity or ability to pick a protege. Yes, it just sits there, and a billion people in India, China and around the world would like to have some. That's not going to change anytime soon.
I like betting on prosperity, but in tough times, gold is something I want to have.
(
Now go up goddammit)
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 4:37 am
by Libertarian666
dualstow wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 8:54 pm
Libertarian666 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:57 pm
Tortoise wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:52 pm
Smith1776 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 4:52 pm
But if you follow something like the 50-50 digital/physical divide and never sell the physical you should be okay. Just a minor modification.
Agreed. But in that case, what you end up with isn't really a PP anymore -- it's just physical gold. I.e., the hyperinflation transforms the PP into ~100% physical gold, and after that happens it's technically not a PP anymore.
Right, it's composed only of the most valuable type of financial asset anyone could own.
Gold is so weird. Figuring it out is chimeric. The attacks on it are well known: young people like bitcoin; maybe one day we'll synthesize gold; "it doesn't produce anything." It's not a bet on prosperity.
However, one thing I really love about it is that it doesn't change. Right now, we can't synthesize it. We can't print it or magically conjure more out of digital thin air. We can only try to extract more. There is no manager risk. There is no brilliant CEO who is going to be caught having relations with an employee and who will subsequently be forced out. There is no genius at the helm who has the company's worth tied up with his health, longevity or ability to pick a protege. Yes, it just sits there, and a billion people in India, China and around the world would like to have some. That's not going to change anytime soon.
I like betting on prosperity, but in tough times, gold is something I want to have.
(
Now go up goddammit)
You forgot one of the favorite boglehead attacks: "you can't eat it".
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 6:53 am
by dualstow

Right! A classic. I think they got that from misremembering that Native American quote that goes something like “only after the salmon are gone and the animals are wiped out and the water is undrinkable and there is no more fruit in the trees will you realize that you cannot eat money.” Heavily paraphrased, but basically true. And, not a very good argument against gold vs other financial holdings.
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 7:14 am
by mathjak107
I can't spend my living room at the super market either
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:05 am
by Libertarian666
mathjak107 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 19, 2020 7:14 am
I can't spend my living room at the super market either
You can if you get a HELOC.
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:09 am
by mathjak107
not really when you think about it .. all you are doing is taking a loan the same as any other loan ... you are just using the house for collateral..
once in the house you can never really get to that money without selling . even reverse mortgage is a loan .
the problem is today , you need to meet the same requirements for a mortgage as a heloc ..no job can mean no heloc .. also dont forget 2008 saw many helocs closed
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:11 am
by Libertarian666
mathjak107 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:09 am
not really when you think about it .. all you are doing is taking a loan the same as any other loan ... you are just using the house for collateral..
the problem is today , you need to meet the same requirements for a mortgage as a heloc ..no job can mean no heloc .. also dont forget 2008 saw many helocs closed
Sure. I have no debt and lots of cash, so I'm good.
Anyone who has a HELOC and thinks they might need cash might want to draw on it now while they still can.
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:17 am
by mathjak107
the problem is then if you are borrowing money and have investments you are keeping instead of raising cash levels . in effect you are buying those investments leveraged with borrowed money ....
this is a very important point brought to light by michael kitces ......
in effect when we buy investments and take a mortgage we are leveraging . anytime you leverage you want a risk premium over just plain investing ...
like now , you are paying thousands of dollars in interest if at the early stages of a mortgage plus being down in investments .. so leverage while staying invested really demands higher reward potential then just investing ..
if you look at a mortgage of around 3-4% and risk free treasuries are paying 1.50-2% then for me a balanced portfolio does not adequately compensate me for doing so on borrowed money ... so at this point unless i was going pedal to the metal with 100% equities for the long term i would not borrow to invest in a portfolio for less risk premium. i would forgo the investment to raise that cash ....
most dont think in terms of the fact that when they have a choice of investing and borrowing or paying cash that they really are borrowing to invest but risk is increased greatly .... sequence risk if retired shoots up big time in down years when spending down paying potentially thousands for interest while those investments are falling .
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:23 am
by mathjak107
here is the link to the kitces article
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Planners have long recommended that clients save and invest, even while they have a mortgage, since the long-term return on equities generally exceeds the interest rate on a mortgage. Yet in reality, investors don’t simply choose to invest in equities because the return is higher than a fixed alternative; instead, investors demand an equity risk premium over and above the risk-free rate to make equity investing worthwhile.
For the traditional investor, the equity risk premium has represented the excess return of stocks over long-term government bonds. Yet for the mortgage borrower, the available "risk-free return" isn’t just a government bond, but to prepay the mortgage and eliminate the interest cost!
As a result, while the investor looks for an equity risk premium over government bonds paying 2%, the mortgage borrower actually shouldn’t invest in stocks unless there’s an expectation to earn an equity risk premium over a mortgage interest rate that might be 4% to 5%! Consequently, clients should prepay their mortgages unless they expect a full 9%-10%+ return on equities in the current environment that sufficiently rewards them for the risk!
https://www.kitces.com/blog/why-keeping ... -the-risk/
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:41 am
by Libertarian666
mathjak107 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:17 am
the problem is then if you are borrowing money and have investments you are keeping instead of raising cash levels in effect you buying those investments leveraged with borrowed money ....
this is a very important point brought to light by michael kitces ......
in effect when we buy investments and take a mortgage we are leveraging . anytime you leverage you want a risk premium over just plain investing ...
like now , you are paying thousands of dollars in interest if at the early stages of a mortgage plus being down in investments .. so leverage while staying invested really demands higher reward potential then just investing ..
if you look at a mortgage of around 3-4% and risk free treasuries are paying 1.50-2% then for me a balanced portfolio does not adequetly compensate me for doing so on borrowed money ... so at this point unless i was going pedal to the metal with 100% equities for the long term i would not borrow to invest in a portfolio for less risk premium. i would forgo the investment to raise that cash ....
most dont think in terms of the fact that when they have a choice of investing and borrowing or paying cash that they really are borrowing to invest but risk is increased greatly .... sequence risk if retired shoots up big time in down years when spending down paying for interest while those investments are falling .
Right, I wasn't suggesting borrowing for investment, just to have an emergency fund in parlous times.
As I said, I have no debt at all and am not going to incur any.
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:44 am
by mathjak107
if someone borrows though , on a heloc up front to raise cash , you are borrowing to invest if you have investments you are holding instead .
it is not a case of just having a heloc in place if you are using it up front to raise cash in case you loose your job or don't want to risk if you do that the heloc will be cancelled like 2008 saw
[/quote]
Anyone who has a HELOC and thinks they might need cash might want to draw on it now while they still can.
[/quote]
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:50 am
by Libertarian666
mathjak107 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 19, 2020 9:44 am
if someone borrows though , on a heloc up front to raise cash , you are borrowing to invest if you have investments you are holding instead .
it is not a case of just having a heloc in place if you are using it up front to raise cash in case you loose your job or don't want to risk if you do that the heloc will be cancelled like 2008 saw
Anyone who has a HELOC and thinks they might need cash might want to draw on it now while they still can.
[/quote]
[/quote]
Right, if you have one and need cash you should get it now.
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 10:09 am
by mathjak107
providing you are not borrowing money when you have assets in a portfolio available to you unless those assets really have enough of a risk premium over time to warrant borrowing money to keep in place . that means 3-5% over the risk free bond and the mortgage rate .
in my opinion i would not consider the risk premium to be worth it at this point. investing normally sure , but not borrowing money to stay in those assets without a risk premium over a bond and the mortgage to make the additional thousands in interest worth it .
we have two different cases ... someone with no money being invested or invested who needs cash vs someone who is basically borrowing money in the form of a heloc or mortgage to invest or stay invested .
very different situation .
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 2:46 pm
by Libertarian666
mathjak107 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 19, 2020 10:09 am
providing you are not borrowing money when you have assets in a portfolio available to you unless those assets really have enough of a risk premium over time to warrant borrowing money to keep in place . that means 3-5% over the risk free bond and the mortgage rate .
in my opinion i would not consider the risk premium to be worth it at this point. investing normally sure , but not borrowing money to stay in those assets without a risk premium over a bond and the mortgage to make the additional thousands in interest worth it .
we have two different cases ... someone with no money being invested or invested who needs cash vs someone who is basically borrowing money in the form of a heloc or mortgage to invest or stay invested .
very different situation .
In general I agree. Perhaps if you have an enormous capital gain you don't want to realize, it might be better to borrow for an emergency.
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 3:07 pm
by mathjak107
There may be exceptions tax wise but the important thing few realize is that when comparing mortgage and invest or no mortgage you are buying investments on what amounts to margin ...you have different terms than margin but in theory you are buying margin....
Many would tell you they would never buy on margin yet they don’t realize that once mortgages and investments are involved you are buying with borrowed money in effect and you should get a bigger risk premium over just investing normally
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Mon Mar 23, 2020 3:02 pm
by CT-Scott
Speaking of HELOCs...I just applied for one. I had been thinking of doing that for a while, but didn't need the money. I still don't need the money right now, and I'm not worried about my (or my wife's) job security, but ever since I sold all of the stock in my 401k I'm finding myself in a cash-hoarding mode.
I have often thought about buying some gold (digital or physical). That's not an option in my largest 401k account, but I have another 401k account related to a side-business I used to operate (no new funds coming in, but I still have the 401k sitting there) and it allows me to invest in just about anything I want (TD Ameritrade).
Re: Portfolio safety in extreme cases
Posted: Mon Mar 23, 2020 3:50 pm
by Libertarian666
CT-Scott wrote: ↑Mon Mar 23, 2020 3:02 pm
Speaking of HELOCs...I just applied for one. I had been thinking of doing that for a while, but didn't need the money. I still don't need the money right now, and I'm not worried about my (or my wife's) job security, but ever since I sold all of the stock in my 401k I'm finding myself in a cash-hoarding mode.
I have often thought about buying some gold (digital or physical). That's not an option in my largest 401k account, but I have another 401k account related to a side-business I used to operate (no new funds coming in, but I still have the 401k sitting there) and it allows me to invest in just about anything I want (TD Ameritrade).
I don't know about physical gold in a 401k, but in an IRA you could go with Gold Star Trust. They have pretty low costs.