If inflation starts to ramp up why stay cash?

Why put money in 10 year notes that earn 2.2% when and my money lose value VS buying lets say SPY that warns a yield of 2.1%

At least with inflation assets appreciate and cash loses value.
 
the only problem SPY down since the start of the year by 4%

and bonds up 15%.

So if you follow you logic you lost at least 20% in 6 months
 
Quote from noob_trad3r:

Why put money in 10 year notes that earn 2.2% when and my money lose value VS buying lets say SPY that warns a yield of 2.1%

At least with inflation assets appreciate and cash loses value.

Isn't this why everyone is buying gold?
 
Quote from kashirin:

the only problem SPY down since the start of the year by 4%

and bonds up 15%.

So if you follow you logic you lost at least 20% in 6 months

I am not thinking 6 months I am thinking 25 years.
 
Quote from morganist:

Isn't this why everyone is buying gold?

because when gold was expensive in the late 70s early 80s they did real bad compared to someone who was buying the S&P 500 basket it seems.

why do I want to repeat history?
 
Quote from noob_trad3r:

because when gold was expensive in the late 70s early 80s they did real bad compared to someone who was buying the S&P 500 basket it seems.

why do I want to repeat history?

Yeah, well historically, the S+P at this level offers little return over the next year or two.
 
Quote from noob_trad3r:

because when gold was expensive in the late 70s early 80s they did real bad compared to someone who was buying the S&P 500 basket it seems.

why do I want to repeat history?

The other economic factors are not the same. I would look at the surrounding factors that support the S&P and question whether they can be sustained. Gold demand is high not from solely American demand but global demand. It will have growth from elsewhere.
 
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