Buy Gold Urges Dalio on Linkedin - "Militaristic Leaders Playing Chicken Risks Hellacious War"
- Don't let "traditional biases" stop you from diversifying into gold - Dalio on Linkedin
- “Risks are now rising and do not appear appropriately priced in” warns founder of world's largest hedge fund
- Geo-political risk from North Korea & "risk of hellacious war"
- Risk that U.S. debt ceiling not raised; technical US default
- Safe haven gold likely to benefit by more than dollar, treasuries
- Investors should allocate at least 5% to 10% of assets to gold
- "If you don’t have 5-10% of your assets in gold as a hedge, we’d suggest that you relook at this"
- "If you do have an excellent analysis of why you shouldn’t have such an allocation to gold, we’d appreciate you sharing it with us ..."
by Ray Dalio via Linkedin
There are returns, and there are risks. We think of them individually, and then we combine them into a portfolio.
We think of returns and opportunities as coming from those things we’d bet on, and we think of risks as the adverse market consequences of us being wrong due to our being out of balance. We start with our balanced beta portfolio—i.e., that portfolio that would most certainly fund our intended uses of the money.
Everyone should have their own based on their own projected uses of money, though more generally, it’s our All Weather portfolio.
We then create a balanced portfolio of opportunity/alpha bets based on what we think is likely to happen. We then combine them.
We bet on the events/outcomes that we think we have an edge in understanding. For events/outcomes where we don’t think we have a particular edge—e.g., political events—we aim to construct our portfolio to be relatively neutral or balanced to those risks.
Risk and Volatility
As a rule, periods of lower risk/volatility tend to lead to periods of greater risk/volatility. That is reflected in our aggregate market volatility gauge (see below), and markets are pricing in volatility to remain low next year too.
As a related rule, people adapt to the circumstances they have experienced and are then surprised when the future is different than the past.
In other words, most people are inclined to assume that the circumstances they have recently encountered will persist, which leads them to change what they are doing to be consistent with that recently experienced environment.
For example, low-volatility periods in which credit is readily available tend to lead people to assume that it’s safe to borrow more, which leads them to lever up their positions, which contributes to greater volatility and hurts them when things change.
That appears to be the case now—i.e., prospective risks are now rising and do not appear appropriately priced in because of a) a backward looking at risk and b) corporate leveraging up has been high because interest rates are low relative to many companies’ projected ROEs and because past risks have been low.
The emerging risks appear more political than economic, which makes them especially challenging to price in.
Most immediately, during the calm of the August vacation season, we are seeing
1) two confrontational, nationalistic, and militaristic leaders playing chicken with each other, while the world is watching to see which one will be caught bluffing, or if there will be a hellacious war, and
2) the odds of Congress failing to raise the debt ceiling (leading to a technical default, a temporary government shutdown, and increased loss of faith in the effectiveness of our political system) rising.
It’s hard to bet on such things, one way or another, so the best that one can do is be neutral to such possibilities.
When it comes to assessing political matters (especially global geopolitics like the North Korea matter), we are very humble. We know that we don’t have a unique insight that we’d choose to bet on.
Most importantly, we aim to stay liquid, stay diversified, and not be overly exposed to any particular economic outcomes.
We like to hedge our bets, though we are never completely hedged. We can also say that if the above things go badly, it would seem that gold (more than other safe haven assets like the dollar, yen, and treasuries) would benefit, so if you don’t have 5-10% of your assets in gold as a hedge, we’d suggest that you relook at this.
Don’t let traditional biases, rather than an excellent analysis, stand in the way of you doing this (and if you do have an excellent analysis of why you shouldn’t have such an allocation to gold, we’d appreciate you sharing it with us).
Full article by Dalio on Linkedin here
Follow GoldCore on Linkedin here
News and Commentary
Gold inches lower as N.Korea tensions ease (Reuters.com)
Asian markets bounce back as North Korean threat recedes (MarketWatch.com)
Paulson And Other Hedge Funds Rewarded as Angst Fuels Gold (Bloomberg.com)
Bitcoin Surges Past $4,000 on Speed Breakthrough (Bloomberg.com)
Stocks Surge, Havens Retreat as Korea Fears Wane: Markets Wrap (Bloomberg.com)
S&P 500’s Biggest Pension Plans Face $382 Billion Funding Gap (Bloomberg.com)
HONG KONG IS HAVING ANOTHER GO AT GOLD TRADING – HERE’S WHY IT WILL SUCCEED THIS TIME (SCMP.com)
This Gold Coin Built the Smithsonian (SmithSonIanMag.com)
Gold Prices (LBMA AM)
15 Aug: USD 1,274.60, GBP 986.92 & EUR 1,084.05 per ounce
14 Aug: USD 1,281.10, GBP 987.34 & EUR 1,085.48 per ounce
11 Aug: USD 1,288.30, GBP 993.67 & EUR 1,096.47 per ounce
10 Aug: USD 1,278.90, GBP 985.39 & EUR 1,091.67 per ounce
09 Aug: USD 1,267.95, GBP 974.80 & EUR 1,079.79 per ounce
08 Aug: USD 1,261.45, GBP 967.78 & EUR 1,068.20 per ounce
07 Aug: USD 1,257.55, GBP 963.41 & EUR 1,065.90 per ounce
Silver Prices (LBMA)
15 Aug: USD 16.89, GBP 13.12 & EUR 14.38 per ounce
14 Aug: USD 16.97, GBP 13.09 & EUR 14.39 per ounce
11 Aug: USD 17.09, GBP 13.18 & EUR 14.53 per ounce
10 Aug: USD 17.08, GBP 13.14 & EUR 14.57 per ounce
09 Aug: USD 16.59, GBP 12.76 & EUR 14.14 per ounce
08 Aug: USD 16.39, GBP 12.57 & EUR 13.87 per ounce
07 Aug: USD 16.13, GBP 12.35 & EUR 13.67 per ounce
Recent Market Updates
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- Silver Mining Production Plummets 27% At Top Four Silver Miners
- Gold Consolidates On 2.5% Gain In July After Dollar Has 5th Monthly Decline
- Gold Coins and Bars See Demand Rise of 11% in H2, 2017
- Greenspan Warns Stagflation Like 1970s “Not Good For Asset Prices”
- What Investors Can Learn From the Japanese Art of Kintsukuroi
- Bitcoin, ICO Risk Versus Immutable Gold and Silver
- This Is Why Shrinkflation Is Making You Poor
- Gold A Good Store Of Value – Protect From $217 Trillion Global Debt Bubble
- Why Surging UK Household Debt Will Cause The Next Crisis
Important Guides
For your perusal, below are our most popular guides in 2017:
Essential Guide To Storing Gold In Switzerland
Essential Guide To Storing Gold In Singapore
Essential Guide to Tax Free Gold Sovereigns (UK)
Please share our research with family, friends and colleagues who you think would benefit from being informed by it.
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