
Goldfinger, the Bond film from 1964, portrays a scene where a woman is covered in gold and dies from ‘skin suffocation’. Slack Investor notes that gold has had a good recent run and hopes that those involved with gold continue to prosper.
Is Gold Good?
A lot of people think so – and, it has performed well lately.
The price of gold exceeded US$2,900 an ounce last week for the first time. Since October 2023, it has risen by more than US$1,000 an ounce. The price is three times higher than it was a decade ago. – Tom Stevenson, Fidelity – Livewire, February 2025
Gold does well as a hedge against inflation and, in times of uncertainty. The chart over the past 10 years looks pretty good.

Gold is also rare and, besides its valued use in jewellery and ornaments, it is an essential industrial metal for computers, communications equipment, spacecraft, and jet aircraft engines.
All of the gold discovered thus far would fit in a cube that is 23 meters wide on every side. – U.S. Geological Survey
Chris Bryki from Stockspot argues that every investment portfolio should contain gold to even out portfolio performance in uncertain times. Stockspot have even increased their gold exposure, through the GlobalX GOLD ETF, to above 12% in their very successful personalised investment and super funds.

There is no doubt that gold has been successful during market crashes in the past – and it will decrease your portfolio volatility. But, usually, it can also drag the portfolio down when times are good in the markets. Unusually, since 2023, gold has increased greatly at the same time that stock markets have also done well. Something weird is going on!
Gold makes sense for investors that sleep better at night knowing that at least some part of their portfolio is going up during times of market stress. Gold might also help to avoid selling your investments during a downturn – when the shares are undervalued! You could sell the gold for income during a market crash.
Slack Investor has his own plan for these down times – the Stable Income pile.
Does Gold appeal to Slack Investor as an investment?
Firstly, gold would not get a guernsey in his Stable Income pile as it does not produce any income by itself.
Only a Goldsmith Knows the Value of Gold – Old Turkish Proverb
Despite the sound arguments for gold, Slack Investor just can’t bring himself to put gold in the Slack Portfolio – the Investment pile. The big problem he has, is that Slack Investor has no idea whether the current price for gold is a fair reflection of its value – it has had a big run lately – is it overvalued? At least when he is buying stocks, he can have a look at the company’s earnings and get an idea of whether the company is cheap, or expensive, by comparing its projected price to earnings (P/E) ratio.
This is Slack Investor’s difficulty with all non-income producing assets – these include precious metals, artworks and even cryptocurrency – there is no way to determine their actual value. The price of these speculative assets is only defined by what the next person will pay for them. So, none of these types of assets will appear in the Slack Investment Portfolio.
Slack Investor will continue to take his chances with stocks that are growing, predicted to grow further, and producing income. His investment portfolio will be more volatile for not having gold – but, it is the long-term performance that counts the most with Slack Investor.
Slack Investor hopes to never draw down on his investments in the lean years when his stocks are undervalued. He has his Stable Income pile (currently 22% of total retirement funds) to get him through the periods when his Investment pile might go negative. The Stable Income fund target is to earn a little above the inflation rate. The Slack Investment fund has more ambitious goals and the pursuit of growing stocks (without gold) might have more ups and downs – but, so far it’s working!
5-yr Return | 10-yr Return | 15-yr Return |
13.4% | 15.7% | 14.8% |
February 2025 – End of month update
Slack Investor is IN for Australian index shares, the US Index S&P 500 and the FTSE 100.
February has continued well for the UK Index, the FTSE 100 is up 1.6 %.
The S&P 500 (-1.4%) has had a bit of a pull back and the ASX 200 is down 4.2%, erasing its January gains.
All Index pages and charts have been updated to reflect the monthly changes – (ASX Index, UK Index, US Index).
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What investments does a Slack Investor have in his income pile?
Hi Peter
My Stable Income pile consists of two Annuities, a high interest cash ETF, a real estate ETF, a fixed interest ETF, a term deposit, and some dividend-producing consumer-staple shares.
Cheers, and happy investing, Slack Investor