
Let's Get Physical
Equitile Conversations
Gold vs Savoy: Dinners Per Ounce
George calculates £236.32 per head and finds one ounce of gold buys 14 dinners today versus three in 1971.
In the first episode of 2026, George Cooper and Gerald Ashley examine the persistent “debasement trade”: fiat money weakening while physical assets surge. They revive the “Savoy Gold Dinner ratio,” a metric from the 1970s/80s created by gold mines fund manager Julian Baring.
In August 1971—days after Nixon closed the gold window—a comparable Savoy Grill dinner cost £5.67 per head. With gold at $40/oz (£16.66/oz at the fixed rate), one ounce bought roughly 3 dinners. At their recent meal on the 7th January: The bill came to £236.32 per head (with modest wine), with gold at $4,460/oz (~£3,303/oz), yielding 14 dinners per ounce—a 4.7× gain in gold’s purchasing power over 54 fiat years. Interestingly in wage terms, the meal’s burden barely budged: 1.4 days of average weekly earnings in 1971 (at £20 a week) vs. 1.6 days today (now at £736 a week). The Savoy has kept pace with labour costs, but gold has vastly outrun inflation as a store of value.
This reflects a wider rotation: investors favour scarce physical assets—industrial metals, fertilizers, shipping, energy—over easily copied digital ones. AI commoditises software moats (e.g., image generation displacing Adobe tools; potential chip-design replication), eroding advantages for asset-light firms. Gold supplants bonds as the prime safe haven amid fiscal stress.
Governments are increasingly close to Hyman Minsky’s “Ponzi stage,” with US debt interest topping $1 trillion yearly, driving money creation that inflates tangible-asset demand. But Bitcoin, despite debasement hype, is stalling - its digital replicability (via substitutes) contrasts with bullion’s scarcity. This episode highlights a return to capital-hungry physical realities over ephemeral software.
View the article on Gerald and George's dinner at the Savoy in The Times:
This episodes book recommendations
Gerald
Does God Play Dice?: The New Mathematics of Chaos by Ian Stewart
George
Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World by Jack Weatherford


