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The U.S. Dollar vs. Gold: You Should CareBy Chris CiovaccoNovember 2, 2006
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When President Nixon closed the gold window in 1971, the U.S. dollar went off the gold standard. The dollar in your wallet cannot be exchanged for gold. The dollar is simply backed by the "full faith and credit" of the U.S. government. Today, no major currency is on the gold standard. As a result, gold acts as the world's only true currency. We can create an endless supply of new paper money using the fractional reserve banking system in the United States. We cannot endlessly increase the supply of gold (especially in the short run). As a result, gold represents a better place to store wealth than any paper or fiat currency. In the financial press, the appeal of gold is often portrayed as a way to protect yourself from "end-of-the-world" events. The press tells us that people buy gold because they are fearful. There is no question that there is some truth to that concept. However, I would argue that the real appeal of gold is that it enables you to protect yourself from constant money creation which erodes the purchasing power of paper currencies. As the chart below shows, the U.S. dollar, as measured vs. a basket of foriegn currencies via the U.S. Dollar Index (shown in red below), has lost roughly 30% of its purchasing power since July of 2001. The endless creation of credit and the dollar's decline has not gone unnoticed by many investors. These investors have flocked to gold (shown in blue).
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Are Assets Really Worth More?Let's start with bond investors. The Vanguard Intermediate Bond Index (red line below) has appreciated roughly 10% since July of 2001. If we include dividends (not shown in chart), the total nominal return is a more repsectable 34%. Unfortunately, the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar (blue line below) has dropped roughly 30% in the same period. That means the real return vs. the dollar is only 4%. A 4% real return for parking your money for over five years (2001-2006).
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The news is no better for stock investors. Using the Vanguard 500 Index as a proxy, the total return, including dividends (not shown in chart), was roughly 26% since July of 2001. That means vs. the 30% loss of purchasing power in the dollar, stock investors (in real terms) have lost money in the past five years. In chart below, blue line is the S&P 500, the green line is the Dow, and the red line is the U.S. Dollar Index.
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Recent CCM Commentary and Investment Research This article is Part 3 of 3 Part Series:
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TOPIC: U.S. Dollar vs. Gold |