When you think of buying gold, you may envision physical gold bars stacked in a safe just begging for a heist. However, whether you are looking to buy or sell gold product, it can be quite a lucrative long-term investment.
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Like most market-based investments, the price of gold gyrates in all directions. So how has it performed over the last ten years? If you invested $1,000 in gold a decade ago, how much would it be worth today? Let’s find out.
Ten years ago, the price of gold had an average closing price of $1,158.86 per ounce. Today, it’s worth about $2,744.67 per ounce. That marks a 136% increase in value, or an average annual return of 13.6% (not calculated for compounding interest).
By that assessment, if you had invested $1,000 in gold a decade ago, it would be worth approximately $2,360 today. That’s a solid return. However, how does it compare to, say, an investment in stocks?
The S&P 500 rose 174.05% over the last ten years, for an average annual return of 17.41%. And that doesn’t even include its dividend yield over that time. Consider too that as volatile as the S&P 500 is, gold’s 21 Affordable Small Cities To Retire on the East Coast have varied even more in modern history.
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When Richard Nixon severed the dollar from gold backing in 1971, the price of gold suddenly started floating at market rates. It consequently skyrocketed over the rest of the 1970s, delivering an average annual return of 40.2%. Then the 1980s arrived and the gold party screeched to a halt. From 1980 through the end of 2023, gold notched an average annual return of just 4.4%. Gold lost value in most years in the 1990s, for example.
Gold doesn’t work like other investments. Traditional investments like stocks and real estate work because they generate revenue. Investors measure that revenue, assess the likelihood of future revenue growth, and put a value on the investment based on it.
Gold doesn’t produce revenue. In fact, it doesn’t “do” anything. It sits there and looks pretty. This may not mean much when the rest of the economy hums along healthily, but it can become plenty meaningful when a wrench gets thrown in the gears.
Many investors consider varying amounts of gold the ultimate safe haven investment. When “the world goes to hell in a handbasket,” investors can buy gold in the form of gold coins, gold ETFs and more on the gold market.
Why? Precisely because it’s been used as a store of value for millennia.
Investors like gold as a hedge against geopolitical uncertainty. If global markets and supply chains look like they might get disrupted, investors flock to gold. In 2020, for example, gold jumped 24.43%.
Likewise, investors retreat to gold when fiat currencies lose value fast to inflation. Amidst all the inflation anxiety in 2023, gold rose 13.08%. Even in 2025, according to current forecasts, the price of gold is expected to increase by around 10%, potentially pushing it close to the $3,000 per ounce mark.
The bottom line is that gold offers a non-correlated hedge against stock market crashes. In other words, gold offers diversification — a collapse in financial markets doesn’t cause a collapse in gold prices. Quite the opposite: many investors believe gold will rise in price if a bear market hits.
So, is gold a “good” investment? It’s a defensive investment. Don’t expect it to generate the same Are You Rich or Middle Class? 8 Ways To Tell That Go Beyond Your Paycheck as stocks or 6 Hybrid Vehicles To Stay Away From in Retirement, or pay any cash flow. But when the zombie apocalypse comes, gold will have value, even if no other investments do.
G. Brian Davis contributed to the reporting for this article.
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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: If You Invested $1,000 in Gold 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Today?