What is the SAFEST Investment in the World?

Posted in Banking, Investment Products, Investments

world11After the recent financial crisis, many people begin to think that no investment is safe. Luckily, this is not quite true. Let us review the lowest risk options available to an individual investor.


At the top of the list are US bank accounts. The cash in your bank account is insured by FDIC, and FDIC itself is backed by full faith and credit of the US federal government. The chance of the US government defaulting on its obligations is really tiny. Remember, however, that FDIC does not insure the full balance in your account. Normally the insurance limit is $100,000 per bank, so if you have $300,000, you should spread it over 3 accounts at 3 different banks. Right now, this limit is temporarily raised to $250,000.

The second place is taken by money market funds. Money market funds are not insured by the government, but they are very carefully monitored by regulators and they invest in an extremely conservative way. As a result, in their nearly 40-year history, there have been only a couple cases where investors lost their principal. Even then, the losses didn't exceed 3 cents on the dollar. You can freely withdraw money from a money market fund at any time.

The third place is taken by US Treasury bonds. This security is also backed by the US federal government. There is some risk, however. If you buy a 10-year bond today for $1000, you may find that its price falls to $800 a year from now. Sure, after 10 years, you will get the full $1000 from the government. But the market price of the bond depends on many factors that change quite quickly. Therefore, if you may need your money soon, this investment isn't as safe as it might look. The shorter-duration Treasury securities (such as Treasury bills) are as safe as bank accounts, since their price doesn't change much.

Now one might ask, how safe is gold? Many people think gold is safer than anything else. If the unthinkable happens, such as the US government collapses and the country descends into anarchy, neither bank accounts nor cash currency would hold much value. But gold is likely to still be valuable; in fact, its value might even go up, since no other convenient method of payment would be available.

However, think about a different scenario. You buy some gold in 1980 for about $650 an ounce. Then you watch your savings evaporate, as its price falls to $300 just two years later. Referring to the data below from goldprice.org, you can see the volatility of the past 36 years. How safe is that? After all, if you only think about the "end of the world" scenario, gold is great. But if you consider the more realistic future, it turns out gold is as risky as stocks.

36-year-gold-prices4-16-2009-3-34-26-pm2

So, the final answer is that the safest investment available today is an FDIC-insured bank account. Just remember to watch the insurance limit, and spread your funds across several banks if needed.


@Me, there is no such thing as 'intrinsic value'. The only value that anything holds (whether its a piece of art, a car or even a little slip of paper with green ink) is what people are willing to say its worth. You wouldn't be able to walk into a grocery store and buy your week's food with a chunk of gold, you can't pay your bills or get a tank of gas. There is a reason every country and every person in the world has a vested interest in paper money.
1/21/2010
Yeah - gold is doing well now - but there is always that chance that when it drops it can drop very steep, like the example in the chart.

But the point I think is that currency fluctuations are not extremely volatile as with other investments (including gold).
1/21/2010
Don't know how much I can agree with this. Gold is not going to drop 20-30% anytime soon, and I don't think you'll be losing 10% overnight either. If you've lost more than 5% and pay attention to any news at all you're in a good position to sell and still come out ahead depending in when you bought in.

There's a reason gold is so high today. The equities market and the dollar have and will fail again. If gold drops there will be people to buy it including myself. You can have all the paper money in the world you want. I'd gladly buy your gold at a discount.
1/21/2010
Agree,

Paper money has value otherwise we wouldn't be able to use it in our markets. As with gold - people (the market) also give gold it's value as well. Both by itself - if there were no such thing as a market economy, both wouldn't have any value at all.

The value of our "paper money" is based on the currency market (foreign exchange market).
1/21/2010
Paper currency can lose value (it's called "inflation"), and gold can lose value (just look at the price chart above - would you want to invest in gold in 1980?). So neither is 100% safe.

When paper currency loses value, it does so slowly. For example, the most doomsday inflation scenarios in the US imagine about 15-20% inflation rate. That's a loss of 15-20% of your value over a course of a year, or just about 0.3-0.4% per week. After a week or two of price rises, you can just move your money into commodities or other investments, and cut your losses at under 1%.

Can't do that with gold. Gold price can fall fast. You can lose 10% overnight. And in the course of a couple weeks, you can lose 20-30%.

In that sense, paper currency is safer.
1/21/2010
Dead wrong!!! Paper currency always goes down to ZERO - that's a fact. Look up the history to understand the future. "Gold is money and nothing else" that's what J.P. Morgan said and he knew a thing or two about money. Don't confuse paper currency with Money. To put it in a perspective, paper money is just a growing lie about how much gold "Money" the banks are holding. Guess what, the lie grows (quantitative easing) and gold is about the same...You do the math. Gold has intrinsic value hence only the paper money changes not the value of the gold. More paper translates in more of it needed to buy the real stuff.
1/21/2010
LOL - yeah, but unfortunately your mattress doesn't pay interest..
1/6/2010
I would hope that everyone knows to ONLY trust banks or institutions that are FDIC insured! And, to add to this list, Collectibles! Just read an article about how saving and selling those can be quite lucrative!
1/6/2010
interesting - I wonder how many people would list "in their mattress" as #1 nowadays
4/20/2009
A good "rule-of-thumb" on risks.
4/15/2009

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