You Are About to Make a Bad Investment

Recs

12

Don't you invest in that just because you think it's a good idea. I'm warning you.

Across 10 asset classes, over a near-40-year time horizon, and in increments of three, five, and 10 years, there's one investment vehicle that made for a total loser -- a dud.

It's gold -- that so-called safe haven for your assets -- and if you're considering it today, let me explain why you need to bypass it and move on. Although gold may well be one of your favorite items in the vault, as a long-term investment, it just doesn’t cut the mustard.

Bring on the hate mail
You needn't take my word for it -- Investor's Business Daily pulled the data. Unfortunately, so few have the gumption to say that gold is simply not worth your time. Why?

Perhaps because, as IBD wrote, "in one recent five-year period -- the one ended Feb. 7 -- [gold funds] leave a different impression. Gold funds tracked by Lipper Inc. cranked out an average annual return of 25.45% vs. U.S. diversified stock funds' 12.60%."

You can bet your bottom dollar those returns have a lot to do with the metal's relatively recent surge in popularity. Everyone’s jumped on the bandwagon. And, as usual, investors continue to chase performance and follow the herd. Longtime gold bugs, however, will tell you there are more reasons to believe that gold is a worthwhile spot for your money.

With all the chaos in the marketplace right now and the impending threat of economic doom, the investing herd is thinking, "Hey, gold is the perfect option to safeguard money from hyper-inflation and make a good return at the same time." And though I agree that gold funds offer some defensive protection against inflation, and I agree that industry giants such as Goldcorp can get hot at times, four decades' worth of data demonstrate that gold is a riskier and lower-returning investment than pretty much any other.

Higher risk/lower reward
The IBD article hit the nail right on the head when it said, "Investors often lose sight of longer-term historical investment results, especially during short-term periods of extreme volatility and trending markets."

Bingo!

Short-term, return-chasing thinking is precisely what is driving otherwise crafty investors toward bad decision-making, and that is exactly why you should avoid throwing all your money into a precious metal that has little or no practical application. Before I get to what exactly you should be considering, it is important to understand just what the gold bulls are thinking.

Looking through the other side
Supporters of gold like to note that the past 40 years were an unprecedented period of growth in the American economy. We witnessed the rise of the quintessential American business -- names like McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD), Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), and other companies that revolutionized or invented their industries alongside booming growth in our domestic economy -- the likes and returns of which we'll probably not experience again. OK, this may be true.

Gold bulls go on to suggest that there is no reason to believe that the next 40 years of equity returns will look anything like the prior 40. Our economy is too big and too developed ... and that is probably true.

It's all about risk
According to gold folk, we're entering an era of massive economic risk thanks to our miserable levels of national and personal debt. Sad to say, we know this is true. Titans of our financial markets have dropped like a sack of potatoes in the past months, and now, even once-stodgy companies like Legg Mason (NYSE: LM) and Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC) could face the guillotine if a just few things don't go right.

Hey, don't forget about political risk from terrorism, a more competitive China, and the end of cheap fuel. Risk is everywhere, isn't it?

To that I say: Where did the risk ever go?

Wasn’t it difficult for Americans to buy shares of IBM (NYSE: IBM) during the height of the Cold War and with the underlying threat of nuclear war? Yet investors who stuck with their guns on stock in the computing giant have since compounded an astounding 9.4% per year, compared to a measly 4.8% on gold since 1975.

With all the bear markets, through the oil crises, Black Monday, the implosion of the dot-coms, stagflation, and our current economic mess (pretty much all the economic risks you can think of), do you know which asset class coupled poor returns with mind-numbing volatility? Yup, our favorite precious metal: gold.

Goldfinger will not be pleased
I'm not bashing gold simply to bash. In fact, it isn't the worst idea to put a small slice of your portfolio in gold to seize some of the benefits of diversification. But there's a better solution for the rest of your money: Go with the asset class that has consistently demonstrated the highest returns on investment with some of the lowest elements of risk -- small-cap stocks.

This isn't my own unproven theory -- the data comes from the same study I mentioned before. Generally, equities trump just about every available investment alternative you have. But small caps, in particular, demonstrate significantly high returns with comparatively low risk.

Remember, much of the negative information we're hearing these days about our economy has already been priced into the markets or is getting priced in as we speak.  Don't dwell on hindsight information; look forward to the entities that will drive the world’s future growth.

The truth will make you rich
To find the best of the small-cap world, you've got to think like a great small-cap stock. Remember: The giants of industry you know today once resembled the Netflixes, Sigma Designs (Nasdaq: SIGM), and Ctrips (Nasdaq: CTRP) of the world we know now. And though our economy has matured, great companies will inevitably find their way to the top of the U.S. markets, displacing others if they have to.

That's because many of the world's best businesses -- like Netflix -- started small, with great ideas on top of cash-generating business models and entrepreneurial owners at the helm. And there are plenty more out there where those came from.

If you want to be on the side of returns that smash gold in the long run, then you must allocate toward these types of stocks.

Need some ideas? Consider our Motley Fool Hidden Gems small-cap service, which searches out the best of the small-cap world. Click here to get all of our research and recommendations free for 30 days.

Already subscribe to Hidden Gems? Log in here.

This article was first published March 3, 2008. It has been updated.

Fool analyst Nick Kapur used to have a gold class ring, but sadly, he lost it. Ctrip is a Motley Fool Hidden Gems recommendation. Netflix is a Stock Advisor pick. Legg Mason is an Inside Value choice. P&G is an Income Investor selection. Sigma is a Rule Breakers choice. The Fool owns shares of P&G and Legg Mason and has a disclosure policy.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On June 12, 2009, at 2:50 PM, Nigel1234 wrote:

    Gold is up every year for teh last 9 years. If you don't have a slice of gold in your portfolio you are a meathead. You can also save gold INSTEAD OF USA DOLLARS through GoldMoney.com or physical gold because it is extremely liquid and you can access it any time - why have your emergency fund or a substantial amount of money in cash. If you are hoarding dollars and don't understand the fact that the dollar's purchasing power is constantly eroding and is only an I.O.U. from the government, you are also a meathead and need some schooling. the fiscal policy of the government has eeroded the dollar's purchasing power from this: $1; to this $0.03. If you don't understand this and the fact that anything denominated in US dollars like stocks, oil, gold is troule fro you, you are a...well, you need more schooling. Gold and oil are true stores of value and its price denominated in US dollars is what changes, not the TRUE price of gold or silver. A strong US Dollar leads to cheaper oil and gold, the reverse is true. Good luck FOOLS!

Add your comment.

Compare Brokers

TD AMERITRADE
more info
ShareBuilder
more info
Power E*Trade

more info
Scottrade
more info
Fool Disclosure

DocumentId: 919302, ~/Articles/ArticleHandler.aspx, 12/4/2009 1:17:24 AM

Report This Comment

Use this area to report a comment that you believe is in violation of the community guidelines. Our team will review the entry and take any appropriate action.

Sending report...

The Must-Read Story on Fool.com
What Scares Me About Regulation

By The Motley Fool

What Scares Me About Regulation

Related Tickers

12/3/2009 4:01 PM
PG $62.56 Down -0.63 -1.00%
The Procter & Gamb… CAPS Rating: *****
WFC $26.49 Down -0.96 -3.50%
Wells Fargo & Comp… CAPS Rating: ***
CTRP $76.63 Down -0.58 -0.75%
Ctrip.com Internat… CAPS Rating: ****
LM $28.71 Down -0.18 -0.62%
Legg Mason, Inc. CAPS Rating: ****
MCD $61.97 Down -0.53 -0.85%
McDonald's Corp CAPS Rating: ****
IBM $127.55 Up +0.34 +0.27%
International Busi… CAPS Rating: ****
SIGM $10.48 Down -1.03 -8.95%
Sigma Designs, Inc… CAPS Rating: *****

Community: Investing Wiki

Term Of The Hour

Individual Retirement Account: An Individual Retirement Account or IRA is either a traditional or Roth IRA set up with a financial institution like a bank, broker, or mutual fund in which contributions may be invested in many types of securities such as stocks, bonds, money market, and CDs.

Want to learn more or edit this definition?
Click here to read more!