I'm not doing particularly better than you, down about 40% since May. I have two accounts, an ordinary one and an IRA.
The ordinary account is now all municipal-based money market. The IRA has enough in the short-term note (including, I notice, some from Bear-Stearn and Lehman, unfortunately) money market fund to cover the next required withdrawal.
I do have a Pension which has been reliable since I retired in 2001, but I guess I need to worry about them too. As of the current year, it is about 50% fixed benefit and 50% market based. However, the fixed benefit is paid from market based assets so it is obviously of some concern too.
And then, there is the fallback of Social Security, which is, of course, still solvent (no thanks to Bush).
With all the central banks printing money like there is no tomorrow, it is only a matter of time before everybody begins to realize that money is a bad joke. That should result in a massive swing to hard assets. Unfortunately, I have no idea how that will work when money is considered worthless.
Gold? It is difficult for me to think of it as anything more than another commodity, and one which is in massive oversupply at that. I saw a gold dealer (or maybe miner) on CNBC some time ago stating that the stored gold would meet the next 20 years of industrial needs. If the system crumbles, then I would expect that holding some sort of gold certificate would not give you a great expectation of ever receiving real gold.
What is really important is to design and implement a future in which there is no cross-coupling allowed between the various financial services: commercial banks, brokerages, VCs, mortgage lenders, etc. I mean to write about this but it can't help being tremendously wordy.