Billionaires Elon Musk And Michel Saylor: Dump The Dollar And Buy Physical Things

In This Article:

This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

Own physical things instead of cash. That’s the high-level advice Elon Musk has for those seeking advice on where to store their wealth when inflation is running rampant.

The Tesla chief was tweeting in response to MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor’s prediction that inflation would persist at 40-year highs, and that investors’ flight from “cash, debt, & value stocks to scarce property like #bitcoin will intensify.”

Musk seemed to agree, saying that “it is generally better to own physical things like a home or stock in companies you think make good products, than dollars when inflation is high.”

He added: “I still own & won’t sell my Bitcoin, Ethereum or Doge.”

It’s an interesting comment considering that Musk, who welcomed his second child this month with musician girlfriend Grimes, has sold all seven of his California residences for a reported $128 million and currently rents here in Texas.

And no, Bitcoin, Ethereum, Dogecoin and other digital assets are not “physical things.” But to Michael Saylor’s point, they are private property (unlike fiat currency), and they are scarce (like gold). Bitcoin supply is capped at 21 million, while no new Ether tokens are being produced.

And did you know that the Ethereum network moved a greater value of transactions than either Visa or Bitcoin in 2021? Some $11.6 trillion were settled on the network last year compared to $10.4 trillion for Visa and $4.6 trillion for Bitcoin, according to the Ethereum Foundation’s Josh Stark.

Cash Is Trash

Nevertheless, Musk’s advice is sound. The value of cash is disappearing at an annual inflation rate of 7.9% right now, though I believe that number to be much higher. Savings accounts are earning a measly 0.06% on average. Bond yields are underwater.

Whole countries, in fact, are dumping U.S. dollars from their forex reserves. Though de-dollarization has been happening for the past few years in places like Russia and China, I expect to see it accelerate following the former country’s invasion of Ukraine and the imposition of tough financial sanctions. This ought to benefit the Chinese yuan, whose profile was elevated last week on reports that Saudi Arabia is considering pricing its oil sales to China in the currency.

U.S. Dollar and Chinese Yuan as a Percenty of Total Foreign Currency Reserves
U.S. Dollar and Chinese Yuan as a Percenty of Total Foreign Currency Reserves

Homes And Used Vehicles Have Skyrocketed In Value

Meanwhile, U.S. home prices are up about 20% from a year ago, as measured by the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index. The median cost of a single-family home is now north of $400,000 for the first time ever. The Wall Street Journal reports that homeowners earned more from their residences than their jobs last year.