A few years ago I thought investing in gold was something only parents and grandparents obsessed over.

    Now every time I see the price chart, I understand why people treated it so seriously.

    The weird part is that even though prices are extremely high, people still keep buying it for weddings, gifts, traditions, and “security.” It’s almost emotional at this point, not just financial.

    But I honestly wonder where the limit is.

    At what point does gold become so expensive that regular middle-class families simply stop participating in the tradition altogether?

    Curious how everyone here sees it:
    Investment? Cultural pressure? Financial safety net? Or just fear of missing out?

    I used to think gold was old-fashioned until I saw the prices keep rising
    byu/keishapatel_387 ininvesting



    Posted by keishapatel_387

    5 Comments

    1. captain_ahabb on

      It’s pretty clearly a short term bubble driven by political instability in the US that won’t last forever.

    2. New_Reputation_2486 on

      It’s the fact that it’s both an investment and a safety net, gold hedges against inflation while also maintaining a steady rise in value. As other assets grow volatile, it’ll just be more valuable

    3. Moomoomilkpapi on

      Gold is an investment that is cyclical. Make money from Gold during these cycles and then rotate and rebalance to other assets when better opportunities for gains are available.

      Regardless of what public opinion is of world governments and central banks, they wouldn’t be buying Gold if it didn’t mean something or didn’t have some form of value.

      I prefer Gold-related ETFs as they are easier to trade and can benefit from tax-free advantages in specific registered accounts. People will buy to “stack” (I personally see Gold as an investment and not an “end of the world” commodity), for culture, and of course to make money.

    4. If you can’t tell it’s AI slop from the obvious language, it always follows the same script: “I used to do something, now I don’t. It’s about this, not that. *Curious* to know….”

      Yeah, for some reason the prompts that these bots use likes to use the word “curious” to ask questions. Here’s an example: /r/investing/comments/1st7se9/holding_isnt_passive_even_when_most_people_treat/

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