The Best Inflation Hedges for 2021 & Beyond

The Best Inflation Hedges for 2021 & Beyond
A 2019 Australian Perth Mint Year of the Pig 1/2 troy ounce gold bullion coin and a 2016 Royal Canadian Mint 1/10 troy ounce gold bar sit atop a 125 gram polished slab of jewelry-grade, off-white Siberian nephrite jade.

Let's face it.  2020 had been a rough year for a lot of people.  And while I would like to be able to tell you that 2021 will be better, I can't do that with any degree of certainty.

As 2020 ended, it became apparent that central bankers and governments around the world will resort to further money printing in an attempt to (temporarily) solve their problems.  This is in addition to the printing press largess that has already flowed forth.  As a reminder, the Federal Reserve's balance sheet expanded by almost $3.2 trillion during 2020.  Meanwhile, the U.S. Treasury mailed out checks totaling $1,800 to every adult citizen ($1,200 in the spring and another $600 at the end of the year, with more possibly coming in 2021).

And the U.S. Government hasn't been especially profligate compared to foreign governments either.  Other central banks around the world have been printing money just as quickly in relation to the size of their economies.

It is a situation that cannot persist without eventually triggering negative financial consequences.

So smart investors are beginning to look for inflation hedges - ways to protect their hard earned money from rampant monetary dilution driven by foolhardy central bank policies.  So without further delay, I present to you the Antique Sage's best inflation hedges for 2021 and beyond (in no particular order)!

 

Inflation Hedge #1 - Nephrite & Jadeite Jade

Jade is the Rodney Dangerfield of gemstones - it can't get no respect!  At least it can't get any respect outside of China, where the Stone of Heaven has been coveted for millennia.  But Westerners really should take a good look at jade as a tangible investment.  The gemstone possesses superlative physical properties that place it among the very best of inflation hedges.

Jade is actually a blanket term for two gemologically distinct minerals: nephrite jade and jadeite jade.  Both varieties of true jade are harder than either glass or steel.  They vary between 6 and 7 on the Mohs hardness scale of minerals, rivaling the hardness of quartz.

Jade is also the toughest natural material known to man.  Toughness, otherwise known as tenacity, is a material's ability to absorb physical shock without being damaged.  Laboratory tests performed on jadeite jade have determined that it has at least double the compressive strength of granite.  Nephrite jade is even tougher than jadeite jade, sporting a compressive strength that can be quadruple that of granite!

Jade is also immensely beautiful.  Its micro-crystalline structure scatters and diffuses light, giving it an ethereal or dreamy appearance.  This means that jade is unique among gemstones; its luster can mimic soft butter, delicate porcelain or highly-reflective glass, depending on the exact structure of the material.

One way to gain a sense of jade's potential value is through its geology.  Alluvial or placer deposits of jade accumulate via weathering into streams and rivers over millions of years.  It is important to note that only a handful of different materials can survive the punishing hydraulic action of constantly flowing water over such long periods of time.  This short list consists of gold, platinum, diamonds, rubies, sapphires and jade.

Think about that for a moment.  Gold, platinum, diamonds, rubies, sapphires and jade.  It is excellent company for a precious stone to find itself in.

Even though prices for both nephrite and jadeite jade have risen considerably over the past 20 years, the gemstone is still dramatically undervalued in my opinion.

For instance, I recently purchased a rectangular gem-quality Siberian jade slab online.  A slab is simply a piece of rough stone that has been sliced (relatively) thin for collectors or as an intermediary step on the way to a fully carved piece.  This slab had the rind and any fractures or other bad parts cut away, leaving only higher quality material.  It was a tight-grained, highly translucent, off-white to celadon nephrite jade tinged with light green (see the hero photo at the top of this article).

 

Rough Jade for Sale on eBay

 

Siberian jades are among the best in the world - so much so that most Russian production gets exported directly to China without ever seeing the West.  My slab weighs about 125 grams and cost nearly $150.  That translates into a value approaching $1,200 per kilo.

And I was happy to pay it too!

Why?  Because at the time I bought my jade, it was worth about the same as 1/12 of a troy ounce of gold.  It is easy for me to see a world in 10 to 15 years where gold is $4,000 an ounce.  That catapults gold into the upper echelons of inflation hedges.

But I believe that in that same scenario my jade slab could trade for close to 1/5 of an ounce of gold.  That would mean a quintupling of its dollar value from $150 to $750 - an annualized return of better than 11% over a full decade and a half!  An outcome like that would make jade an even better inflation hedge than gold!

If you are interested in finding out what to look for when buying jade, please read my jade investor's buying guide.

 

Gold Bullion

A collection of modern Austrian Mint 2 gram gold bars are joined by a 1928 Dutch East Indies 1 ducat gold coin and a 1904 Czarist Russian 5 ruble gold coin.

 

Inflation Hedge #2 - Precious Metals - Gold, Silver & Platinum

Precious metals are, with good reason, the most widely recognized of inflation hedges.  In addition to being highly portable and liquid, gold, silver and platinum are the very embodiment of the term "intrinsic value".  This is of unparalleled importance in our digital age.  Too many investments these days are simply 1s and 0s in some far off server farm, which offer investors no real safety whatsoever.

But as simple as the concept is - buy precious metals as an inflation hedge - the execution can be surprisingly complex.  First there is the most obvious question, which precious metal do you choose?  They all have their own individual weaknesses and strengths.

Gold is the old-standby of the tangible asset investor.  It has been used as money for at least 5,000 years and there is absolutely no indication that it will ever stop being used as money.  But everyone from housewives to hedge fund managers knows about gold's inflation-hedging abilities.  So although I feel that gold is still a reasonably good value at almost $2,000 an ounce, there is no great bargain to be had there.

Silver is almost as venerated as gold.  But the last 150 years of monetary history have been particularly unkind to the lunar-themed metal.  As a result, it takes more than 70 ounces of silver to equal the price of 1 ounce of gold today.  Throughout most of human history that ratio was well under 20 to 1.

The plus side of this predicament is that silver is tremendously undervalued versus gold today.  And if silver is undervalued versus gold, then it must be egregiously undervalued compared to hopelessly inflated paper assets like stocks and bonds.

Platinum, the dark horse of the precious metal family, has also fallen on hard times lately.  For most of the 20th century, an ounce of platinum was more valuable than an ounce of gold.  However over the past decade the price of platinum has fallen until it takes almost 2 ounces to equal a single ounce of gold.

This means platinum is a screaming buy, in my opinion.  But platinum investors must be wary too.  A significant amount of platinum demand is industrial in nature.  Automobile catalysts, scientific equipment and the chemical/glass-making industry all use substantial amounts of the precious gray-white metal.  Consequently, platinum demand is vulnerable to swings in the broad economy in a way that gold demand isn't.

Another conundrum investors looking for inflation hedges face is choosing what form of the metal to buy.  Do you go with modern bars and coins?  What about older coins that used to circulate?  And what size bars or coins do you buy?

Honesty, I don't think it matters whether you choose newly fabricated bars and coins or older circulated coins.  Feel free to buy whatever strikes your fancy, provided the premiums over spot aren't too high.

 

Fractional Gold Bullion Coins for Sale on eBay

 

I find the question of size to be much more interesting, though.  Premiums are lowest on larger bars and coins, and lower premiums are always good.  But you lose flexibility when it comes time to sell because you must sell at least one full bar/coin at a time.

So for example, a 1 troy ounce gold coin will cost you nearly $2,000 today.  That is a substantial chunk of change for anyone to put down for a single purchase.  And if the price of gold were to double to $4,000, you couldn't sell just half an ounce.  No, you would have to sell the entire 1 ounce coin.

This is why I favor fractional platinum and gold bullion these days, provided the premiums are reasonable.  Anything from 1/10 to 1/2 troy ounce bars and coins look great in the current environment.  I also like gram-sized gold and platinum bars ranging from 2 to 20 grams.  These bite-sized precious metal pieces can be found starting at around $150 to $200 for the smaller sizes, making them attainable for ordinary people.

Factional bars and coins give investors maximum flexibility in both buying and selling, so they are great inflation hedges.  As an added bonus, if precious metal prices really run skyward then retail demand for small bars and coins would drive premiums up.  This would allow you to recapture some of those elevated premiums when the time comes to sell.

 

Rare Coins

A pair of 19th century Japanese Tokugawa Shogunate nishu-kun (2 shu) gold coins flank a 17th century silver Indian Mughal rupee from the reign of Shah Jahan.

 

Inflation Hedge #3 - Numismatics (Rare Coins)

Rare coins are uniquely positioned among inflation hedges, offering investors a safe haven in a world of ever-devaluing fiat currencies.  They combine the best attributes of two different asset classes - antiques and precious metals - rolled into one.  But strangely, returns for rare coins have been pretty horrid over the last 30 years.  You just have to look at this chart of the PCGS 3000 (a broad index representing the collectible U.S. coin market) to see how abysmally coins have performed as an asset class since 1990.

But it is important to keep in mind that long term returns in all asset markets - including tangible asset markets - are driven by valuations.  So asset classes that underperform for long periods of time (like rare coins have after their late 1980s bubble burst) almost always outperform in the future.  From its peak in 1989 through the end of 2020, the U.S. rare coin market has returned a cumulative (nominal) loss of nearly -70%!  And although this historical market underperformance has undoubtedly been painful for past coin collectors, it means that numismatics is like a coiled spring right now from an investment perspective.

 

PCGS 3000 Index

The PCGS 3000 Index from 1970 through 2020 shows the abysmal investment returns on numismatics since the certified coin bubble burst in 1989.  Photo Credit: PCGS

 

Let's take a look at a specific example to get a better idea of the bargains that can be found.  Not too long ago I bought a Japanese 2 shu gold coin (known as a nishu-kin) in XF condition from eBay for less than $60.  This Tokugawa Shogunate coin was hand-struck at the Edo (modern day Tokyo) mint between 1832 and 1858 - a time when samurai warriors still roamed the streets of Japan.  The cash-strapped Tokugawa government struck nishu-kin coins from electrum, a debased alloy of gold mixed with silver.  In this case, the coins are 29.8% gold and 70.2% silver.

Despite its obvious beauty and historical significance, this particular coin has performed abysmally from an investment perspective over the past 50 odd years.  In 1972 you could buy an example for $7.50.  In 2020 I paid $52 + $4.90 shipping for a grand total of $56.90.  This represents a return of only 4.31% per annum from 1972 to 2020 - a rate that barely beat inflation as measured by the U.S. Government CPI (consumer price index) over the same period.

Another way to look at it is that my Japanese coin has increased in value by a factor of 7.6x over that 48 year period.  At same time silver has increased by 12.3x, gold by 29.0x and the S&P 500 (price only; no dividends) by 30.7x.

 

Edo Era Japanese Gold Coins for Sale on eBay

 

Now you might look at this result and wonder how Japanese coins (or any other coins for that matter) could possibly be a good investment.

It all comes down to the coiled spring effect I mentioned earlier.  Low returns for long periods of time in an asset class invariably lead to future outperformance.  We just don't know when.  But we can indirectly measure this decline in valuations by looking at the premium above melt value that Japanese nishu-kin gold coins sold for in 1972 versus today.

 

Intrinsic Value

of a Nishu-kin in

1972

2020

Gold:

 $0.99

 $28.75

Silver:

 $0.07

 $   0.89

Total:

 $1.06

 $29.64

Price:

 $7.50

 $56.90

Premium:

606%

92%

 

As you can see, the poor returns for nishu-kin coins mean that the premium over melt value - the collector's premium - has plummeted from 600% in 1972 to less than 100% in 2020.  A nishu-kin sold for more than 7 times its precious metal content in 1972 versus less than double today.  These low premiums over scrap value wring the risk out of the equation for today's buyers.  And when you purchase an asset with very little risk, it means that the only thing remaining is reward.

The best part is that Edo era Japanese gold coins are absolutely typical of the performance put up by ancient, foreign and U.S. rare coins over the past several decades.  This means you can buy almost any type of coins you like, safe in the knowledge that numismatics is among the best inflation hedges out there.

 

Sterling Flatware

This early 20th century set of sterling silver teaspoons by Watson-Mechanics silversmiths is nestled in a vintage Milwaukee jeweler's flatware storage roll.

 

Inflation Hedge #4 - Antique Sterling Silver Flatware

Sterling silver flatware and hollowware is the asset class that time forgot.  From the 3rd millennium BC right up until the 1970s every wealthy household aspired to own a chest filled with solid silver tableware.  And no wonder!  Silverware is a store of value (due to its precious metal content) and a useful luxury good wrought into elegant sculpture.

So what in the world happened to one of the world's premier inflation hedges to bring it low?

First, middle class families began coming under increasing financial stress starting in the 1970s and 1980s.  As discretionary income began to dwindle, some traditional luxury goods like silverware saw stagnating demand.

Second, a dramatically rising silver price during the 1970s commodities bull market priced many newer households out of the sterling silverware market.  At the same time, dining and entertaining was becoming less and less formal.  As a result, even after silver prices dropped again in the 1980s and 1990s many consumers had already moved onto buying different luxury goods.

The final coup de grâce for sterling silver flatware arrived with the Great Recession of 2008-2009.  Up until that point, there was still a fairly healthy market for antique pieces from respected makers like Gorham, Tiffany & Co. and Asprey & Co.  But as the middle class financially bled out in the torturous aftermath of the recession, antique and collectibles markets of all types collapsed in value.

Antique silver was one of those unfortunate victims.  Whereas before it was not uncommon for a good antique silver piece from the late 19th or early 20th century to sell for 4 to 5 times its scrap value, it is now normal for such items to trade for less than double melt.  Sometimes more common patterns from less venerated manufacturers will hardly sell for any premium over melt at all.

Although it hasn't been pretty to watch, it is great news for anyone looking to invest in inflation hedges today.  At this point in time, there isn't much downside left.  The value of most antique silverware is well supported by its underlying bullion value, which acts as a floor under the current price.

 

Antique Sterling Silver Flatware Sets on Sale on eBay

 

And the upside is quite considerable indeed!  If fine antique silverware was to trade back up to 4 or 5 times melt, it would imply a doubling or tripling in value with no corresponding move in the underlying price of silver whatsoever.

As an added bonus, huge amounts of antique and vintage sterling silver flatware have been melted over the past 50 years, making the surviving pieces increasingly rare.  Every time the price of silver spiked higher, barrelfuls of silver services disappeared into the refiner's crucible.  In spite of this fact, the depressed antique silver market has been so beaten up for so long that it is possible to pick up some really magnificent pieces for shockingly low prices.

So what types of antique silver do I like right now?

Continental European (especially French) silver is a great buy right now.  Vintage silver services from classic American manufacturers like Towle, Reed & Barton, Alvin, Wallace and Gorham are all solid choices that rarely sell for much over bullion.  To be honest, it is tough to go wrong in antique silver right now regardless of what you buy.

I also find great value in sterling silver "short" sets, which I define as 6 to 12 of a matching set of either spoons, forks or knives.  Because they are smaller than a full service, sterling short sets are among the most affordable of inflation hedges.  Sometimes you can find them in their original custom-fitted cases, too.

As little as $100 will get you started building your very own chest of antique silverware.  And due to it being a buyer's market, you have the ability to pick and choose whatever pattern or style you like.

 

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