I get it that gold is insurance against inflation. And, it's real money in an economic catastrophe.
My question is on behalf of the Anons who may have purchased some gold coins (but lost them in the lake). If we paid $1000 for one 1oz coin, and the US goes back to a gold-backed standard and values gold at $35/oz., that is quite a loss! I am not that is what will happen, but I present that scenario as part of the broader question: What would gold need to be valued at in our fiat US$ currency in order to be the backing?
Any Anons have a sense for the future value of a gold coin in the gold-backed dollar scenario? A lot of people have purchased gold coins hoping that they will revalue north of $20K or $50K to accommodate all of the fiat floating around. But I just can't see the elites letting people get "rich" so easily.
If gold is set at $35/oz, the important question will be how much that one ounce will buy after the revaluation (i.e. does a cup of coffee now cost 5 cents?). I'm more concerned about how many ounces I have versus what it's worth in fiat currency. We'll have to wait to find out 1) if it happens and 2) what the revaluation looks like. The latest estimates I hear floating around say gold would need to be revalued at $100K, give or take.
From what I recall, where I live, prices have risen by 4x-8x in around 30 years.