flyingpylon wrote: ↑Tue Oct 21, 2025 11:45 am
Gold crossed into the "may rebalance" zone for my portfolio on Monday, which I define as within 2% of the "must rebalance" threshold. So I took advantage of that with a partial rebalance. Gold may eventually keep climbing, but it feels good to have taken a little off the table on a day like today. I created this concept of "may rebalance" because there were too many times that I missed out on an opportunity to take gains waiting for that last 1%. I don't have any math to prove that it's any better than anything else but it satisfies the emotional side of investing.
I guess it's better to have felt smart (or lucky) for a whole two months than to never have felt smart at all!
If this keeps up it won't be long before I have to do it again. Good problem to have, I suppose.
"Across the last 5 decades, that puts the Nikkei and gold priced in Yen virtually neck and neck in terms of gains for Japanese investors and savers, rising 811% and 818% respectively since the start of 1974" https://www.bullionvault.com/gold-news/ ... -022220242
Demographics. Also, is it more difficult to code/innovate software in chinese/japanese syntax?
dualstow wrote: ↑Mon Dec 22, 2025 1:52 pm
I can’t sell gold, and I wish there was some group like AA that I could go to for this problem.
Not even swaps? The gold/Silver ratio (GSR) at the start of 2025 stood at 90, a historic relative high, a ounce of gold bought 90 ounces of silver. Year end 2025 the GSR had declined to 57, swapping back gold from silver bought 57% more gold. The price of gold rose 65% across 2025, so in total 1.57 times more gold x 1.65 times higher price = 158% gain (as did the price of silver rise 158%). Year end 2025 and the GSR is more in alignment with the broader average. At the start of 2026 and the gold/copper ratio (troy ounce of gold to Kg of copper price) stands at 344 (a ounce of gold buys 344 Kg of copper). A historic extreme/high (the historic average is less than half that). CPER in the US (COPB in UK).
Reading Wiliam Bernstein's 2nd edition of The Four Pillars of Investing for the third time.
Just read this!
"Unlike crude oil or soybeans, you can store a reasonable amount of gold, but as we just saw, it has about zero long-term real return. The same is true of silver, which over the past few centuries has also barely held its purchasing power.
Bernstein, William J.. The Four Pillars of Investing, Second Edition: Lessons for Building a Winning Portfolio (p. 64). McGraw Hill LLC. Kindle Edition. "
Above provided by: Vinny, who always says: "I only regret that I have but one lap to give to my cats." AND "I'm a more-is-more person."
dualstow wrote: ↑Wed Jan 14, 2026 6:09 pm
I think I still have about 100 1oz silver coins
So a wild guess is that they are worth about $15, 20 each?
I don’t sell them, but I think of them as worth spot price, so $90 each.
Of course a vendor would take a huge bite out of that when buying them back.
You can see what ajpm pays here — https://www.ajpm.com/silver-bullion/
Mine are mostly Britannias though. Why buy bitcoin when you can buy Britcoin?
Whistling tunes / We hide in the dunes by the seaside
Whistling tunes / We're kissing baboons in the jungle
dualstow wrote: ↑Wed Jan 14, 2026 6:09 pm
I think I still have about 100 1oz silver coins
So a wild guess is that they are worth about $15, 20 each?
I don’t sell them, but I think of them as worth spot price, so $90 each.
Of course a vendor would take a huge bite out of that when buying them back.
You can see what ajpm pays here — https://www.ajpm.com/silver-bullion/
Mine are mostly Britannias though. Why buy bitcoin when you can buy Britcoin?
For some reason I thought that they were 1/16th ounce ones so that was why my guess was so low.
Above provided by: Vinny, who always says: "I only regret that I have but one lap to give to my cats." AND "I'm a more-is-more person."
yankees60 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 15, 2026 5:56 pm
Reading Wiliam Bernstein's 2nd edition of The Four Pillars of Investing for the third time.
Just read this!
"Unlike crude oil or soybeans, you can store a reasonable amount of gold, but as we just saw, it has about zero long-term real return. The same is true of silver, which over the past few centuries has also barely held its purchasing power.
Bernstein, William J.. The Four Pillars of Investing, Second Edition: Lessons for Building a Winning Portfolio (p. 64). McGraw Hill LLC. Kindle Edition. "
But it holds its purchasing power. That’s no small thing. And it does it without the need for various third party risks.