Summary
While both gold and Bitcoin have potential as stores of value, their financialization and the current unstable financial system may lead to a shift towards commodity money, and investors should approach with caution and understanding, particularly considering opportunities in gold stocks.
Bitcoin and Financialization
Bitcoin satisfies Aristotle’s 4th century BC characteristics of good money (durable, divisible, convenient, consistent, has use value, can’t be created out of thin air) with advantages over gold as an electronic asset, but its financialization through derivatives has transformed it from currency to “digital gold” similar to how gold futures trading distorted the gold market.
Roger Ver’s book “Hijacking Bitcoin” explains how Bitcoin was co-opted from being a currency to locked-up digital gold with ties to Epstein’s group, and reading both Ver’s and Safedine’s books provides a balanced view of Bitcoin’s evolution.
Financialization of assets like Bitcoin and silver creates inequitable playing fields favoring insiders with more knowledge and firepower, leading to volatile swings and potential losses for smaller investors who lack the same information advantages.
Gold Mining Investment Dynamics
Barrick Gold’s Q4 2022 generated half of the company’s annual earnings in a single quarter by selling each ounce at roughly $4,100, demonstrating the exponential profit impact of rising gold prices on mining operations.
Gold mining stocks remain cheap relative to current prices with Barrick minting money at $1,650/oz all-in sustaining costs, but B2 faces significant risk producing half its gold from Mali, a politically unstable region vulnerable to government interference and heavy taxation.
Barrick Gold’s conservative guidance at $4,500/oz gold price suggests potential blowout earnings at $5,000/oz, with institutional investors like Warren Buffett who hate gold mining stocks failing to believe in a new equilibrium level for precious metals.
Gold mining stocks are expected to perform well over the next 1-2 years with rising earnings, dividends, share buybacks, and debt paydown as the sector benefits from sustained higher gold prices.
Crisis Behavior and Market Structure
In a financial crisis, gold and gold stocks may initially sell off as investors scramble for dollars to pay debts, but they tend to rebound more quickly than the overall market as central banks increase gold buying to avoid holding fiat currency.
Central banks are increasingly buying gold to avoid holding fiat currency and debt, creating a potential floor under the gold price that was not present during the 2008 financial crisis when central banks sold off their reserves.
Stop-loss orders in volatile mining stocks can be dangerous as they may trigger short-selling by insiders who know where the stops are placed, leading to systematic losses for retail investors.
Global Investment Opportunities
Buenos Aires apartments offer the best value for foreign investors at around 10% of the price of New York apartments with superior accessibility compared to raw land purchases that present management challenges.
Japanese interest rates have risen to 3-4% on long-term paper after decades near zero, unwinding carry trades that borrowed cheaply in Japan and invested abroad, likely boosting Japanese stocks while putting downward pressure on Western stocks.
Gold gains are taxed as collectibles rather than capital gains, effectively taxing inflation rather than real gains, while gold serves as a Tier 1 asset for banks and central banks in the global financial system.