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I was looking at my portfolio the other day and started wondering about gold. You know, if someone had thrown $10K into gold back in 2004, they'd be sitting on like $66K by now - that's over 560% gains. Pretty wild considering how people usually dismiss the yellow metal as boring. The average annual return over those 20 years came in around 9.5%, which honestly competes with a lot of stock market plays. Makes sense why some folks keep gold in their 401k mix. What's interesting is that gold doesn't really follow the same patterns as bonds or stocks. The real driver seems to be Treasury yields - when those 10-year rates drop, gold tends to pop. It's basically the inverse relationship. I read that a 100-basis-point jump in real yields historically tanks gold prices by about 24%, so it's pretty sensitive to interest rate moves. The reason is simple: gold doesn't pay dividends, right? So when Treasury yields are high, you're giving up real income to hold it. But when yields are low, gold becomes way more attractive since you're not missing out on much anyway. Plus you've got inflation hedging and geopolitical stuff working in gold's favor too. Anyway, might be worth reconsidering if you've been sleeping on it.