Hi David,
After viewing the video and the study notes on Hull chapter 5, i'm still confused on how to treat gold and silver on the investment vs consumption asset classification.
In the study notes it says (quote): Gold and silver (...) are both investment and consumption assets. It's important to not fall into the trap of classifying gold and silver as one or the other.
However, the final practice question of the notes counts it as an investment asset, stating that "gold, fx and s&p 500 are investment and oil and copper are consumption commodities." Notice how gold is not mentioned as consumption asset too, implying it is treated solely as investment asset.
So if the question would be, how many of the following items are investment and consumption assets: gold, fx, s&p500, oil and copper, what would be the answer?
A. I = 3 and C = 3 (treating gold as both)
B. I = 2 and C = 2 (treating gold as none of both)
C I = 3 and C = 2 (treating gold as investment only, the current suggested answer on this question according to the notes (page 76)
Thanks for the clarification,
Joeri
After viewing the video and the study notes on Hull chapter 5, i'm still confused on how to treat gold and silver on the investment vs consumption asset classification.
In the study notes it says (quote): Gold and silver (...) are both investment and consumption assets. It's important to not fall into the trap of classifying gold and silver as one or the other.
However, the final practice question of the notes counts it as an investment asset, stating that "gold, fx and s&p 500 are investment and oil and copper are consumption commodities." Notice how gold is not mentioned as consumption asset too, implying it is treated solely as investment asset.
So if the question would be, how many of the following items are investment and consumption assets: gold, fx, s&p500, oil and copper, what would be the answer?
A. I = 3 and C = 3 (treating gold as both)
B. I = 2 and C = 2 (treating gold as none of both)
C I = 3 and C = 2 (treating gold as investment only, the current suggested answer on this question according to the notes (page 76)
Thanks for the clarification,
Joeri