Just ran the numbers on something that's been on my mind lately. Everyone talks about gold as this ultimate safe haven, but what's the actual track record? So I decided to look back at what would've happened if you threw $1,000 into gold a decade ago.



Here's what the gold price chart over 10 years shows: back then, gold was sitting around $1,158.86 per ounce. Fast forward to today and you're looking at roughly $2,744.67. That's a 136% gain. Not bad. If you'd actually made that move, your grand would've turned into about $2,360.

But here's where it gets interesting. The S&P 500 did better over that same period—174% returns. So stocks outpaced gold, which kind of makes sense given how much risk you take with equities. Gold's just... there. It doesn't generate cash flow or anything. It's basically a bet that the world gets messier.

What really fascinates me is how uneven gold's history actually is. After Nixon decoupled the dollar from gold in 1971, the stuff absolutely ripped through the 70s—averaging 40% annual returns. Then the 80s hit and it completely flatlined. From 1980 through 2023, gold only averaged 4.4% annually. People forget how badly it performed in the 90s.

The reason investors still care about gold though? It's that hedge function. When everything else is tanking, gold tends to go the other way. In 2020 when everything was chaotic, gold jumped 24%. Same thing in 2023 when inflation anxiety was peaking—it climbed 13%. That's the real value proposition.

So is gold actually a good investment? Depends what you're after. If you want growth like stocks, you'll be disappointed. But if you're building a portfolio that doesn't all move in the same direction, gold does something stocks and real estate can't. It's insurance, not a wealth builder. And sometimes that's exactly what you need.
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