Showing posts with label Gold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gold. Show all posts

Thursday 12 March 2009

'Sell every asset except gilts'

'Sell every asset except gilts'
Conventional assets – even gold – are no good as hedges against the inevitable deflation, says one asset manager.

By David Kauders
Last Updated: 12:17PM GMT 11 Mar 2009

At the end of last week, gilt prices soared and yields fell again. The market reacted positively to the Bank of England's announcement of quantitative easing. Yet in the preceding days and weeks the market had been spooked by concerns that the bail-outs would create inflation. Why the sudden change in sentiment?

It has long been our view that inflation scares have been seriously overstated and the real risk is deflation. Deflation occurs when a shrinking economy leaves businesses and consumers who have already borrowed heavily earning less and therefore unable to afford their existing debts.

There is the danger of a downward spiral caused by less income to pay interest. This is what the authorities are trying to avoid.

In a deflationary environment, only fixed-coupon gilts prosper: even index-linked stocks are ineffective. This is because the real rate of interest (nominal interest less inflation) has historically been around 2pc to 3pc for centuries.

If prices are falling rather than rising, fixed-coupon gilts gain in value, whereas the indexation formula for index-linked gilts indexes downwards with no floor. Other asset classes such as shares, property and many commodities depend on the continued take-up of more credit – which is why they did so well for many years.

As the credit crunch proceeded, governments introduced more and more bail-outs to keep banks lending. Real money, which has to be raised by increased taxation or by selling new gilts, was spent. This gave rise to fears that excess supply would depress gilt prices. Yet events show that the fears were mistaken. There are a number of reasons for gilt prices rising as supply expands:

  • The biggest beneficiary of lower interest rates is government, as lower rates cut the cost of servicing the national debt;
  • Pension funds are willing buyers and therefore absorb any supply offered to them;
  • Risk elsewhere leads to a flight to quality and safety, irrespective of price.
  • In addition, the Treasury have been selling new gilts to the market through the Debt Management Office's auction programme in order to fund the Government's spending. This takes cash out of the economy, yet the Bank of England wants to buy gilts back to put public money into the economy.

If the policy works it may ameliorate the recession, but the result is that the Bank of England counteracts the effect of the Treasury's extra supply of gilts.

Being realistic, there are many reasons why this quantitative easing may be of only cosmetic effect: why should banks lend to over-indebted businesses and consumers? What if they just run down their derivatives positions further?

Banks and building societies have to hold capital in reserve to ensure they can meet any losses. Historically, they had significant holdings in gilts and deposits at the Bank of England, but over the past 30 years standards were relaxed and other types of debt security were brought into those reserves.

Now they are rediscovering the advantages of having highly saleable assets such as gilts in their core capital and are therefore willing buyers of government bonds. Such bank purchases are significant, just as pension funds will be material buyers when they opt for certainty instead of risk to stem their losses in stock markets.

These large investors are the only ones who can sell to the Bank of England, yet they have good reasons for being net buyers.

However you look at it, institutional demand is increasing no matter what the supply of gilts. Nearly 20 years ago, in the recession of the early 1990s, the Government sold more gilts and prices rose (yields fell), in that case from around 13pc in 1990 to around 9pc in 1993. Inflation then was around 10pc and about to fall sharply. Notice the parallels as inflation now threatens to turn into deflation, the Government issues more gilts and prices rise again.

Investors have been pursuing property and gold for protection against financial risk. But property is an inflation hedge, not a deflation hedge, since its price level depends on the continued supply of credit.

There are also demographic factors that have favoured property in the postwar years but now turn against it: the lower birth rate, extensive owner occupation and the shift from net immigration to net emigration. Add this to the current financial pressure, and you can see why property is no longer a viable investment.

As for gold, it is the ultimate inflation hedge, since easy money provides the fuel for more people to buy it. But it is not a deflation hedge, for one simple reason. No currency is exchangeable into gold and no government is going to wreck its country's economy by adopting a gold standard.

This explains why the gold price perks up occasionally then always slips back again. The safest asset in the financial system is the promise of government to honour its own debt.

Private investors need to go with the flow. Investing in stock markets, like property, is proving singularly unrewarding at present. We believe the bear markets have much further to run before shares and property are cheap enough to buy again.

Since income offered by gilts is still above that earned from many bank accounts and there is a continuing flight to quality, gilt prices must go on rising until this deflation is over.

Investors should change to a gilt-only strategy to preserve capital and income. This way, they will have the cash to buy the bargains when stock markets offer them.

David Kauders is a partner at Kauders Portfolio Management.

Related Articles
Inflation will kill the gilt rally in the end
'Inflation will beat deflation and gold will hit $3,000'
Retirement plans of millions of Britons at risk
Comment: Who are the losers when inflation disappears?
Stock market: The Bear's view on shares
New Star peers into the future



http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/4969399/Sell-every-asset-except-gilts.html

Wednesday 4 March 2009

Gold: Warning for investors chasing short-term gains

Gold: Warning for investors chasing short-term gains
The scale of the recent moves in the gold price and the resulting publicity are reasons for caution.

Daniel Sacks of Investec Asset Management
Last Updated: 3:56PM GMT 03 Mar 2009

There is no doubt that gold is getting a lot of coverage in the media, among global macro investors and the real money community. The suggestion is that everyone is "long" – expecting the price to rise further – and that the move has become overextended on both an absolute and an historical basis.

However, while it is true that gold has reached record highs in most currencies, it is still $70 below its dollar high reached almost a year ago and, when adjusted for inflation (CPI), the high point reached in 1980 is the equivalent of over $2,500 an ounce.

The gold price may well continue to suffer further short-term falls as part of a general upward trend, as has already been the case during this rally. However, it does not appear that we are approaching the stress point that a market often reaches near the end of a sustained price move as the graph becomes parabolic.

Indeed, the positive gold price trend is being tempered by the drop-off in Indian and Middle Eastern jewellery demand flows. Conversely, as jewellery manufacturers’ stocks decline, their willingness to buy the dips may diminish the downward moves of gold.

Gold behaves like a currency – it can be traded globally at the same price and has adequate stocks to back it up – yet it cannot be printed. It must be mined at a cost. It is hence a real asset, which generally holds its value in inflationary conditions. Gold has typically done well during periods of rising inflation and negative real interest rates.

The only episode approaching the severity of the current recession and the accompanying shock to net worth came in the aftermath of the first oil shock of 1973-74. That led to negative real interest rates at the short end of the curve in the US for five years, to higher inflation and ultimately to a major bull market for gold. Encouragingly, the current gold price is still about 60pc below its mid-1980 peak in real terms.

Gold appears to be benefiting both from being the traditional hedge for inflation hawks (some of whom are now beginning to worry about the risk of hyperinflation) and from the mistrust of some investors towards cash assets and government obligations during the current financial crisis.

It would probably require only a minority of investors to believe that they need to continue to allocate more towards gold to have a significant price impact.

Even though inflation risks remain low in our view, we believe that these forces are likely to continue to support gold prices.

Daniel Sacks is co-portfolio manager, Global Gold and Precious Metals at Investec

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/gold/4931336/Gold-Warning-for-investors-chasing-short-term-gains.html


Comment: A highly speculative asset for the uninitiated.

Tuesday 3 March 2009

Gold update: Sixth day of falls in New York


Gold update: Sixth day of falls in New York
Gold has fallen in New York for a sixth straight session as some investors sold the precious metal to cover losses in equity markets. Silver also declined.

By Bloomberg staffLast Updated: 4:30PM GMT 02 Mar 2009
Gold futures for April delivery fell $2, or 0.2pc, to $940.50 an ounce at 10.10am on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The metal dropped 6pc last week.
In London, gold for immediate delivery lost $1.88, or 0.2pc, to $940.47 an ounce in early afternoon trading. The precious metal has earlier risen by as much as 1.7pc.
In February gold climbed by 1.5pc, the fourth consecutive monthly gain, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell by 11pc. Investment in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest exchange-traded fund backed by bullion, reached a record 1,029.3 metric tons on February 26.
“As things get a little uglier in the stock market, we might see some selling of gold for margin calls,” said Frank McGhee, the head dealer at Integrated Brokerage Services in Chicago. “There’s some weight on gold now.”
Silver futures for May delivery declined 20.5 cents, or 1.6pc, to $12.905 an ounce. The metal rose 4.3pc in February.
News, comment and analysis on gold on our new dedicated page

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/gold/4928372/Gold-update-Sixth-day-of-falls-in-New-York.html

Thursday 26 February 2009

World's favourite yellow metal at record highs




A golden opportunity but don't rush in without thinking

Last Updated: 12:22AM BST 18 Oct 2007


With the world's favourite yellow metal at record highs, investors must take care, says Nina Montagu-Smith

The price of gold recently reached a 28-year high, hitting $739 an ounce, its highest level since February 1980, before settling back to around $730 an ounce this week.

Stock market volatility and a renewed demand for gold from developing countries, which are increasingly cash-rich, are the main drivers of this rise, and look set to continue to support it. So should investors be getting in on the gold rush too?

Mark Dampier, investment adviser at the independent financial adviser Hargreaves Lansdown, is a gold fan. He said: "I am keen on gold at the moment. It seems the world is a bit more of an uncertain place right now and gold is something that is seen to store value."

Philippa Gee, investment specialist at the independent financial adviser Torquil Clark, said: "There are occasions in the life of a stock market cycle when investors prefer gold to most other asset classes and this is one of those times."

However, Ms Gee counselled against any dramatic switching of assets into gold, saying that most investors should not allocate more than 9 per cent of a portfolio to gold. "The attractiveness of gold as an asset can change quickly and most investors are unable to react at the same pace," she said.

Brian Dennehy, of the independent financial adviser Dennehy Weller, was even more cautious, suggesting a maximum of 5 per cent of an investor's portfolio should be given over to gold.

He said: "Gold is a fringe asset that has a record of destroying capital, which is why it has only just reached a level last achieved 28 years ago. By contrast, the FTSE All Share index is up in excess of 1,000 per cent since 1980, with dividends on top. And if history is any guide, the stock market still looks decent value."

Ms Gee said: "Some people will assume that because natural resources-related commodities have been delivering strong returns of late, this is the place to invest all their money, but that is the route to madness.

"If you want the commodity to be anything other than fool's gold, you need to keep your allocation low and diversify as much as possible."

There are several ways to invest in gold. You can buy physical gold either directly by buying bullion – not an easy option for the average private investor – or indirectly through exchange-traded funds, known as ETFs. Exchange-traded funds are investment funds which can be traded on the stock market in the same way as shares or investment trusts, but are open-ended, like unit trusts. This means there is an unlimited number of shares, which are issued on demand.

Exchange-traded funds track indices of shares, giving you exposure to the exact make-up of a particular index, or commodities, including gold. As with company shares, you buy ETF shares via a stockbroker. They can be bought and sold at any time during trading hours, giving you immediate exposure to the commodity or share index of your choice.

Exchange-traded funds specialising in gold are currently offered by ETF Securities, which runs exchange-traded funds in gold, platinum, commodities, and precious metals, and as Barclays Global Investors iShares.

Alternatively, it is possible to buy shares in gold mining companies through pooled funds such as investment trusts, unit trusts and open-ended investment companies (Oeics). The advantage of choosing a pooled fund is that you get the services of a professional fund manager who will select stocks on your behalf, and your investment benefits from greater diversification.

Mr Dampier said: "You can buy physical gold, but if the gold price goes up, then so will the gold mining stocks."

He chose the Merrill Lynch Gold & General fund which has benefited from excellent performance, adding: "Had the gold price kept up with this fund, it would now cost $8,000 per ounce." (Comment: Note the disconnection.)

Mr Dennehy, the reluctant gold investor, also selected this fund for fans of gold, saying: "If you insist on speculating in gold, put yourself in the hands of the experienced elves running Merrill Lynch Gold and General."

This Merrill Lynch fund, which has more than trebled investors' money after charges are deducted in the past five years, has an initial charge of 5 per cent and an annual management charge of 1.75 per cent .

In order to spread risk, both Mr Dennehy and Ms Gee said investors should consider a more diversified commodities or natural resources fund instead of restricting themselves just to gold.

Although past performance should not be used as an indicator for the future, these funds can produce excellent returns. Merrill Lynch World Mining Investment Trust, for instance, has turned a £1,000 investment five years ago into £6,235 now. JP Morgan Natural Resources has turned £1,000 into £5,584 over five years, including the effects of charges.

Mr Dennehy said: "Consider a diversified commodity fund such as JP Morgan Fleming Natural Resources, or, my preference, a more thoughtful fund such as M&G Global Basics. The latter can have an exposure of up to 50 per cent in commodities, but at the moment has nearer 30 per cent , because commodity companies as a whole are just not that attractive – private investors should take heed of this strong message from such a hugely successful fund."

JP Morgan Fleming Natural Resources has an initial charge of 5.5 per cent and an annual charge of 1.5 per cent . M&G Global Basics levies a 4 per cent initial fee and a 1.5 per cent annual management fee.

Contacts
For performance and prices of pooled funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), see http://www.trustnet.co.uk/ or http://www.morningstar.com/
For information about investing in physical gold, see the World Gold Council: http://www.gold.org/
To find a local independent financial adviser, see IFA Promotion: http://www.unbiased.co.uk/

Gold investors make 120pc return in four months

Gold investors make 120pc return in four months
Private investors who have bought exchange traded funds that track the performance of gold miners have more than doubled their money since October last year.

By Richard EvansLast Updated: 12:18PM GMT 25 Feb 2009
A gold investment that private investors can buy on the stock market has gained in value by more than 120pc in four months.
The Russell Global Gold fund, an "exchange traded fund" or ETF that tracks the performance of gold miners, has produced a total gain of 121pc since October 27 last year.
Meanwhile, a similar investment that tracks the gold price has risen by 33pc since November 21 and by 65pc since this time last year. The gold price broke through the psychologically important $1,000 an ounce level last week.
The Russell Global Gold fund, which tracks the performance of the world's largest gold miners, is the strongest performing equity ETF among those provided by ETF Securities.
"The fund continues to benefit from investors' positive view on the gold price and the leverage to the gold price gold equities provide," said ETF Securities. "Despite recent price increases, gold equities are still trading at a substantial discount to their historical levels relative to the gold price."
Investors can buy ETFs from stockbrokers in exactly the same way as buying a normal share. The stockbroker will charge its usual fee, while the company that manages the ETF will deduct its charges, which may typically be about 0.5pc, from the income produced by the fund.
ETF Securities said its S-Net Global Agri Business and Russell Global Coal fund ETFs had also performed strongly, rising by 29pc and 33pc respectively over the past three months.

Ten ways to invest in gold

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/4804472/Gold-investors-make-120pc-return-in-four-months.html

Monday 23 February 2009

What next for the price of gold?

What next for the price of gold?
While the outlook for the gold price remains positive, Blackrock Gold & General fund manager Graham Birch thinks investors should be wary of losing their perspective on it as part of a balanced portfolio.

By Pascal Dowling, head of research at Financial Express
Last Updated: 12:18PM GMT 23 Feb 2009

The price of gold this year overtook platinum briefly for the first time in a quarter of a century, causing a spike in gold funds. But while the outlook for the gold price remains positive, Blackrock Gold & General fund manager Graham Birch thinks investors should be wary of losing their perspective on it as part of a balanced portfolio.

Gold has rallied strongly in recent months to reach around $970 an ounce last week, close to its peak of more than $1,000 an ounce in March last year, prompting a new spike in the performance of funds with exposure to the metal.

Ruffer Baker Steel Gold has produced a total return of 55pc since the start of November when the price of gold began to rise, while Investec leapt 71pc over the same period. Smith & Williamson Global Gold & Resources fund has seen even greater returns, growing 75pc.

Blackrock Gold & General fund has produced a total return of 70pc – the equivalent of turning £1,000 into £1,700 over the same period, but the story behind this stellar performance is more complicated than it first appears.

Fund manager Graham Birch says the collapse of Lehman Brothers may have had a significant effect on the gold price last year, the implications of which are still being felt.

"You could argue that in the autumn of last year gold shares were too cheap. The price of gold was hit very hard during the Lehman crisis – you have to remember that so many people had money tied up with Lehman, and they were forced to sell whatever they had – including gold – during that period just to raise liquidity."

Gold reached a low in October last year, and has begun to recover. Because gold is priced in dollars and the dollar has strengthened against the pound, British investors with exposure to the precious metal have done particularly well.

Mr Birch claims that the commodity will continue to perform well, as people continue to buy into gold as a way to diversify their portfolios, and hedge their bets against the outcome of the various fiscal and monetary stimuli which governments, here and in the United States especially, are using to reinvigorate the economy.

Unsurprisingly, Adrian Ash, head of research at online gold trading facility www.bullionvault.com , agrees. The cost of holding gold, in terms of risk and lost interest, as opposed to cash, has fallen. To all intents and purposes, neither asset now pays any interest, but there is much concern about the possibility that money itself will be worth less in five years should inflation kick in on the back of these economic stimuli.

Mr Ash said: "The stimulus package which is coming through in the United States, I think a lot of people are seeing as the government heading straight to the dollar printing press. The big question is, in 12 months' time how many more dollars will there be in the world, and how much more gold will there be?"

Mr Birch said: "At the moment conditions are deflationary – money buys more than it used to – but central banks have cut back interest rates to virtually nothing, and once they've done that the next step is to use what they call quantitative easing – which is effectively printing money.

"A lot of people who are buying gold at the moment think that there is some danger that this quantitative easing might end in tears. If you are investing in a 10-year bond, for example, the interest rate is lousy, and it's redeemed in sterling – and you don't know what the effect of this quantitative easing is going to be; it could be that it's inflationary, and if it is that means you don't know what the value of sterling will be when it comes to redemption."

This wariness should support further strength in the gold price, claimed Mr Birch, but investors should not see exposure to the asset as a panacea. He explained: "Gold is not really an asset that helps poor people to get rich. It's an asset that helps rich people to stay rich as part of a diversified portfolio. You must remember that the people who are buying gold don't mind if they lose a bit of money on the gold price, if they are properly diversified, because if the gold price begins to fall, that probably means the conventional equity market is beginning to recover so they're making a bit of money elsewhere."

Gold, and in particular funds that invest in gold equities, should not be viewed as an absolute return option – or an option offering positive returns in any market. A recovery in the stock market would quite likely see poor returns or losses for funds of this type, and Mr Birch said this was important to remember.

"To be honest we would not take much action at all if the gold price did begin to fall. It sounds bad but these are sector funds, so we do not shy away from giving exposure to that sector just because it's begun to fall. We would take it on the chin, and that might mean people sell out of the fund, but that's their choice – we are not making the decision to go for exposure to gold for them, so we would not make the decision to deprive them of it,'' he said.

"It just so happens that exposure to gold has provided a good absolute return in recent years, but our goal is simply to provide exposure to it, and hopefully add some value over the long term."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/4786021/What-next-for-the-price-of-gold.html

Friday 6 February 2009

Savings: Where should I put my money?

Savings: Where should I put my money?
Savers have had a rough time of late, but they really shouldn't despair.

By Harry Wallop, Consumer Affairs Editor Last Updated: 7:50PM GMT 05 Feb 2009

Yes, savings rates are the lowest since the 17th Century. But that doesn't mean you should not lock your hard-earned money into iron chests and place into your cellar, as Samuel Pepys did during the Great Fire of London.
For starters there is the stock market. Yes, really. Unless you genuinely believe capitalism is dead, the stock market should be considered. It has consistently outperformed every other asset class, including property during the last century.
Only last week, I topped up the Wallop children's child trust funds – confident that when they are allowed to touch the money, it will be worth a great deal more than if I put the money into Premium Bonds.
Shares are likely to tread water for the next year or two, but in the intervening period most companies should pay out a dividend to their shareholders.
BP, for instance, intends to pay a dividend of £7.70 for every £100 invested. Okay, it is conceivable in these unprecedented times that this oil giant will cut payments to shareholders, but it seems a risk worth taking.
If you don't have the luxury of time – a prerequisite for investing in shares – there are other options.
Most savings accounts pay out less than 1.5 per cent, but there are banks desperate for your money and prepared to offer unprofitable (for them) rates if you scout around.
Standard Life Bank's Easy Access ISA has a rate of 3.5 per cent – a remarkable rate of return, considering Bank rates have hit just 1 per cent.
Or you can always turn to the last refuge of the desperate: gold, which is proving an impressive, if volatile, performer during the financial crisis.
Either buy the stuff via gold exchange traded funds, which trade on the stock market, or pop down to a bullion dealer and buy a bar of the hard stuff.
You can then store it in your cellar.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/interestrates/4528415/Savings-Where-should-I-put-my-money.html

Thursday 5 February 2009

How to play the coming gold price jump

Questor: how to play the coming gold price jump
Questor explains why it thinks gold is a good investment and the options available to those looking to invest.

Garry WhiteLast Updated: 3:01PM GMT 04 Feb 2009
Questor's view
Gold has always been about wealth preservation - it does well in a time of crisis.
In good times there are better ways to make money than buying gold.
However, equities are now volatile, house prices are falling and current interest rates make saving unattractive. Significantly, people no longer trust the banking system.
In the last few months gold has hit a series of all-time highs in sterling terms because of weakness in the pound - and it is likely to rise further.
Questor feels that now is a good time to look at all the different ways investors can buy into gold, be it coins, bullion or via funds. Questor is not recommending any specific dealers in the metal, but points you in the direction of the World Gold Council (WGC) investor website (www.invest.gold.org)
Click on "where to invest" and you will find a list of dealers in each of the different asset classes. There is a substantial amount of information on the site regarding gold and enough information to decide which asset is best for your own circumstances.
Questor remains a bull of gold through 2009 and urges investors without exposure to buy.
Here are some options available to investors.
Gold coins
The premium on gold coins such as sovereigns and Krugerrands has widened recently as demand for the coins has accelerated.
This means you have to pay more than their weight in gold to make a purchase.
This premium, which could be as much as 20pc, is partly due to their current popularity, but also because of what they are. You are, in effect, buying a piece of history. This will always demand a premium.
To find out more about premium, discuss this with a coin dealer listed on the World Gold Council's website. They should only be too happy to help.
Gold coins are an easy way of storing your wealth and they are easily transported. However, this means that you must pay attention to storage – and there will be insurance costs to consider as well.
Gold bars
You can also buy gold bars through bullion dealers. However, storage and insurance is a problem here too.
There are a number of organisations and mints which run certificate schemes for gold in their vaults.
This means you can invest in the precious metal without having to store the bars yourself. You receive a certificate of deposit showing how much gold is allocated to you.
Perhaps the most famous is the Perth Mint Certificate from Australia. This programme is the only government guaranteed certificate program in the world.
The same service is provided by a number of European organisations too – see the WGC website.
However, there are storage costs associated with this way to play gold. Make sure you check out all the details of the certificate programme before you invest.
Gold funds
Gold exchange traded funds (ETFs) have been around since 2003. It is a way of buying into movements in the gold price without physically storing the metal yourself.
Investors may be aware that in September a number of ETFs were suspended as they were backed by AIG products.
However, one gold ETF that was not suspended because it is backed by real gold was the ETF Securities Physical Gold fund, which trades on the London Stock Exchange under the symbol PHAU.
Some investors may have a US trading account. In this situation they may like to buy the world's largest gold ETF fund streetTRACKS Gold, which is listed in the US under the symbol GLD.
Gold shares
One of Questor's tips of the year is gold miner Centamin Egypt.
The company is set to become a gold producer in the second quarter of this year at the Sukari mine in Egypt.
A detailed analysis of the company was published in this column on Tuesday this week. The shares have risen 13pc since their recommendation and remain a buy.
Silver
Silver is also a precious metal that should not be ignored.
The price of silver tends to move with the gold price – and should the gold price spike, Questor expects that the silver price will rise too.
Questor's recommended investors buy into the world's largest silver producer Fresnillo on January 18.
The shares are up 34pc, after the silver price jumped 17pc since the recommendation was made. Shares in Fresnillo remain a buy.
The technical view
Although Questor does not believe technical analysis alone is a solid basis for making an investment decision, it is a useful tool. So, it is worth taking a look at the situation right now.
Citigroup analyst Yutaka Yoshino believes that the gold price could reach $1,190 or $1,300 in March or May. He thinks that gold has upward resistance at $933 an ounce (the current price is $901).
He argues that a push through $933 would increase the likelihood of gold renewing last spring's all-time high at an early stage.
However, if it fails to breach this level, it would be vulnerable to a pull back and any upward spike will be delayed until March or May.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/markets/questor/4512793/Questor-how-to-play-the-coming-gold-price-jump.html

Sunday 18 January 2009

Going for gold? (Jan 2008 article)

Record breakers: gold and oil prices reached record highs as alarms sounded on inflation




Going for gold?

Last Updated: 1:27AM GMT 23 Jan 2008
The price of crude oil and gold smashed through key milestones this week, prompting investors to consider whether now is the time to take profits, writes Myra Butterworth
Crude oil gushes to historic $100 mark
Sterling slumps to four-year low against euro
Gold soared as analysts warned that inflation and high energy prices would remain a key threat on the economic agenda throughout 2008 - gold soared to $861.20 an ounce in New York on Wednesday, surpassing the levels last seen at the height of the inflation crisis in 1980.
Meanwhile, crude oil touched the $100 milestone for the first time in its history earlier this week, fuelled by jitters about geopolitical stability after the assassination of Benazir Bhutto and the unrest in Kenya.
But on being asked whether gold investors should now take profits, Ian Henderson, the highly regarded fund manager of JPM Natural Resources, was emphatic in his answer. "Absolutely not. It would have to get to $2,000 an ounce in real terms to reach an all time high and we are miles away from that," he said.
"People are bored with property – they don’t like to lose money and they don’t know whether Alistair Darling will bail them out from any banks that may fall into trouble. They get something different with gold which is a useful hedge against inflation and they can get a real feel for the value of their wealth."
Henderson has around 33 per cent of his Natural Resources fund in gold and precious metals and he reckons this could increase to around 40 per cent. He is also bullish on oil and energy related stocks in general. He is also finding opportunities in the less well known commodities such as cobalt, titanium and mineral sand but added that he was reducing his exposure to base metals such as copper and nickel. Here is what other leading experts had to say on whether now was the time to sell oil and gold. (Comment: Looks like Mr. Henderson was wrong in retrospect.)
Graham Birch, head of BlackRock's Natural Resources Team and manager of the Gold and General fund said: "Gold has started off in 2008 at an all time high in excess of $850 an ounce. This represents a continuation of the upward trend which has been in place since 1998. The last time that gold was at $850 an ounce was back in January 1980.
"The main positive factors which have been affecting gold recently include:


  • the weakness of the US dollar,

  • financial market turmoil and

  • more than a whiff of inflation.

Tragically, political instability has also been a factor in the aftermath of Bhutto's assassination.
"On the supply side, production from the worlds' gold mines continued to decline and we believe it would take a significant further rise in the gold price to reverse this particular trend. Although in the short term jewellery demand may suffer some price related weakness, the long term outlook remains bright with emerging market wealth trends especially favourable.
"So, for 2008 we anticipate that the market patterns inherited from 2007 will remain in place. While gold rarely goes up in a straight line the general tenor of the market seems likely to remain favourable."
Mark Harris, head of funds of funds at New Star, said: "I believe the price of oil will remain higher than lower and should not fall below $80 a barrel even if we were to see a slight correction from the current $100 mark. The long-term trend for oil will be upward and on this basis oil majors and oil services companies now represent good value. (Comment: Another prediction that turned out to be wrong on hindsight.)
"The outlook for oil is positive for investors for several reasons. Demand is on the increase, primarily from expansionary markets such as China. At the same time, OPEC is showing a reluctance to increase supply, which suggests supply may be running near capacity. This will continue to put pressure on the price of oil. "I still hold gold within my New Star portfolios - CF Australian Natural Resources and Merrill Lynch Gold & General. However, I have recently trimmed my weightings in expectation of a dollar counter trend rally that may put pressure on gold in the short-term. I believe the long-term outlook for gold is still good and any short-term correction may represent a good buying opportunity, possibly around the $800 an ounce mark. (Comment: In retrospect, he predicted the dollar counter trend rally putting pressure on gold in the short-term correctly.)
"The long-term outlook for gold is positive because demand is on the increase, supply remains marginal and the cost of mining is increasing. These influences combined should ensure that prices remain high."
Alan Steel, of Alan Steel Asset Management, said: "The oil price has been on a tear since summer 2003. Economic factors suggest it is near it’s peak and it is likely to fall 50 per cent over the rest of this year and beyond. Private investors sentiment is showing excessively high optimistic levels, a strong sell signal. Gold is probably on a long term bull market which started in 2001. But it is overdue a breather and a fall - but not as big a fall as oil. Here too investors sentiment is showing excessive optimism, a sell signal. (Comment: In retrospect, this chap got his predictions correct.)
"I would buy large cap equity growth, such as Henderson Global Technology, Neptune US Opportunities, or back Emerging Markets such as Allianz, RCM Stars, BRIC. Currently I think it is too late for oil and gold. Perhaps look at gold again next year."
Mark Dampier, of asset managers Hargreaves Lansdown, said: "Forecasting the direction of any commodity is almost impossible. Indeed I would suggest you might as well consult Mystic Meg so investors should not get carried away. Remember too that existing portfolios are likely to have exposure to oil and possibly gold too so make sure you are not doubling up.
"The outlook for oil depends much on the outlook for the world economy.
If the US, Europe and UK hit a hard recession, I would have thought the demand for oil would reduce and therefore so would the price. The difficulty this time round however is that emerging markets such as China and India are huge consumers of oil which has not happened in previous cycles. Indeed China and India account for something like 35 per cent of world oil imports.
"There is much talk about a decoupling of the Asian type economies and the developed world. However it is far too early to say whether this is really true and I suspect for the time being Asia depends as much on the US as the US depends on it.
"There is also much speculation in the oil price especially given political tensions which of course can suddenly reduce too. I believe oil prices may well come down but if they come down to say $80 a barrel, does it stop the investment case? I think not. The majority of analysts have been using something around $60-70 a barrel for their forecasts so oil needs to come down a long way to affect company profitability.
"How would I play the oil price? You can buy a general commodity fund such as JPMF Natural Resources. However, I would suggest you look at C F Junior Oils a specialised fund that invests in smaller oil producing companies. These are just the types of companies that are being taken over by the large multinationals such as Shell, BP and Exxon who are low on reserves but are cash rich. The fund is run by Angelos Damaskos, the son in law of legendary investor Jim Slater, and I hold it in my own portfolio too.
"I have been a bull of gold for about 18 months. The gold price has only just gone through its old high in 1980. The obvious signal when we look back for the purchase of gold was when the chancellor sold half the gold reserves at about $250 an ounce. While gold doesn’t have a big industrial use, its use in jewellery has grown when demand from places such as India and China have grown with it as these have become more prosperous. In addition gold is looked at as a final store of value, it can’t be defaulted on like a currency or a bond.
"Given both the geopolitical and economic tensions in the world today it is not surprising the gold price has been moving up. I think it has every chance to go over $1,000 an ounce and I hold the BlackRock Merrill Lynch Gold and General fund.
"It is noticeable however that smaller and mid size companies in this arena have not done so well so it may be worth investors looking at Ruffer Baker Steel Gold fund and an offshore fund known as Craton Capital who tend to invest in the smaller and mid size gold companies".




Gold often serves as a proxy for inflation fears

Bullion outshines record from 1980

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

Last Updated: 1:02AM GMT 04 Jan 2008


Gold has soared through resistance to touch an all-time high of $861.20 an ounce in New York, surpassing the record last seen at the height of the inflation crisis in 1980.
Crude oil gushes to historic $100 mark
Sterling slumps to four-year low against euro
Bulls seized the initiative as oil spiked briefly to $100 a barrel and the dollar buckled on bad manufacturing data in the US. The New Year surge - setting the tone for the year - may be viewed with some alarm by central banks, aware that gold often serves as a proxy for inflation fears.
Ross Norman, director of TheBullionDesk.com, said the world faces a new era of "peak gold" in which discoveries become rarer, leaving the market starved of the metal just as demand in China and emerging Asia begins to gather pace.
"Supply is declining despite a seven-year bull run,"
he said. "Production in South Africa is the lowest since the 1930s, and it is falling in Canada. As for the central banks, they are no longer quite so keen to part with their gold.
"New conduits such as ETFs have opened up, giving investors access to a market that used to be off radar. It has led to a slow, glacial flow of big money into gold that is immune to profit taking. On January 9, China will start trading gold futures in Shanghai," he said.
Mr Norman, the top forecaster for the London Bullion Market Association over the past four years, said gold would reach $1,200 an ounce this year.
Veteran gold traders say the metal is enjoying a perfect storm of inflation fears, geo-strategic jitters over Pakistan and mounting concerns that the dollar could lose its role as anchor of the international currency system as Mid-East and Asian states break their dollar pegs.
While there is no likelihood of a return to the gold standard, the metal could find a new role as a hard currency to buttress the dollar and the euro if the Bretton Woods II systems disintegrates any further.
Russia has already said it aims to raise the gold share of its huge foreign reserves to 10pc. There is widespread speculation that a number of central banks could soon start to accumulate gold, rather than rely too heavily on euro and sterling bonds as an alternative to the dollar.




http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/2781954/Bullion-outshines-record-from-1980.html

Insight into world gold market

Gold surged in late trading to a 28-year peak of $824 an ounce




Oil, gold and euro surge to record prices

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard


Last Updated: 1:09AM GMT 08 Nov 2007

Oil has rocketed to an all-time high of $97 a barrel in New York on fears of terrorist attacks on pipelines in the Middle East and falling crude inventories in the United States.
Comment: Stampede into gold comes with a wealth warning
Credit crunch crisis in full in our special section
In a day of wild movements across global markets, the dollar continued to plunge to all-time lows against European currencies while gold surged in late trading to a 28-year peak of $824 an ounce.
The euro reached $1.4568 and sterling broke through $2.09 for the first time since the early Thatcher era in 1981 as funds increased bets that the US Federal Reserve would soon have to cut interest rates again to head off a property crash. By contrast, the European Central Bank may have to raise rates above 4pc after euro-zone inflation reached 2.6pc in October.
Former Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan told a forum in Tokyo that the euro's rise against the dollar is "already finished", predicting that the next phase would be a catch-up by the East Asian currencies, such as the yen and the yuan.
Oil was lifted by a warning from the US Energy Information Administration that "strong demand, limited surplus capacity, falling inventories and geopolitical concerns continue to weigh on the market".
It said US oil reserves fell 4pc last year on lack of new discoveries, with steep drops in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska.
In London, Brent crude rose $2.59 to a record $93.08 a barrel.
The latest slide in the dollar came after the Fed's loan officer survey reported evidence of an incipient credit crunch across broad reaches of the US economy, with banks tightening lending standards on prime mortgages, auto debt and consumer loans.
Bill Gross, head of the giant bond fund PIMCO, said the Fed would have to cut rates to 3.5pc to cushion the blow from likely losses of $250bn on sub-prime and Alt-A debt.
"We've only begun to see the pain for the homeowner in terms of those monthly payments. Defaults and delinquencies will increase as we extend throughout 2007 and into 2008," he said.
Massive purchases of gold by small investors buying exchange traded funds (ETFs) helped drive gold to fresh highs, while traders said that a large buyer operating in Germany had emerged - raising speculation that an Asian or Middle Eastern central bank or sovereign wealth fund has been accumulating bullion.
Barclays Capital said the world gold market had swung this year from surplus to a deficit of 234 tonnes.
"The market has not seen such a wide deficit since 1979, according to our market-supply demand model," it said.
UBS upgraded its one-month gold forecast to $850 but warned that speculative positions on New York's Comex futures market had reached extreme levels, which is typically a warning sign.
"A scramble could see gold push higher still. But one thing is sure, once the dust settles, gold will likely correct sharply lower," said the bank's precious metals analyst, John Reade.
Gold has surged $180 an ounce since mid-August. The last time it moved in this fashion, in May 2006, it gave up almost all the gains in a matter of weeks. The concern is that buyers for the jewellery industry will hold back until the price falls, while European central banks are likely to take advantage of the spike to offload bullion.
Even so, gold is likely to stay firm as long as oil keeps reaching new heights. The two are linked automatically through huge commodity funds that have emerged as major players in the market.




Gold is denominated in the US currency (Nov 2007 article)




Sterling hits $2.10 as dollar is dumped

By Richard Blackden

Last Updated: 1:09AM GMT 08 Nov 2007

China has $1.33 trillion of foreign-exchange reserves
Sterling has pushed through the $2.10 barrier for the first time in 26 years after the Chinese government indicated it is prepared to diversify some of its huge foreign-exchange reserves.
China threatens 'nuclear option' of dollar sales
Dollar crunch puts gold centre stage
Oil, gold and euro surge to records
The pound stormed to as high as $2.1021 in trading in London, a level not seen since the early Thatcher era, and many currency experts now predict it go higher despite signs that the UK economy is slowing.
The greenback's renewed weakness was sparked by comments from Cheng Siwei, vice chairman of China's National People's Congress, who suggested China will diversify some of its $1.33 trillion (£660bn) of foreign-exchange reserves.
Mr Siwei told a conference in Beijing: "We will favour stronger currencies over weaker ones, and will readjust accordingly."
Besides sterling, the dollar was down against 14 of the world's 16 biggest currencies this morning, hitting the lowest since the 1950s versus the Canadian dollar, reaching a new record against the euro and its weakest in more than 20 years against the Australian dollar.
Sterling's move higher comes a day before Bank of England Governor Mervyn King and the rest of the Monetary Policy Committee are due to give their latest decision on interest rates.
While the majority of economists expect interest rates to be left at 5.75pc, the surge in the currency is likely to put parts of the country's manufacturing industry under pressure.
The flight from the dollar is helping to fuel oil's assault on the $100-a-barrel mark and investors' appetite for gold, which is denominated in the US currency. The dollar was also hit yesterday by a report that the Fed's loan officer survey reported evidence of an incipient credit crunch across broad reaches of the US economy, with banks tightening lending standards on prime mortgages, auto debt and consumer loans.

Gold sparkles to a 16-year high as greenback slumps (in 2004)








Gold sparkles to a 16-year high as greenback slumps

By Malcolm Moore, Economics Correspondent

Last Updated: 5:42PM GMT 26 Nov 2004

Gold broke through the $450-an-ounce barrier yesterday, rising to a 16-year high as the dollar fell to a new record low against the euro.
Volumes were thin, since the US market was closed for Thanksgiving, as gold rose $3.70 per troy ounce to $452. The dollar fell to $1.3233 against the euro and to $1.8888 against sterling.
Gold, which has risen 13pc since September, has been "primarily driven" by the weakness of the dollar, according to Kamal Naqvi, a precious metals analyst at Barclays Capital. He believes the next resistance level for gold is "about $461". Gold has risen by $59.75 in the past year but only by £8.18 in sterling terms in the same period.
The fall in the dollar was partly triggered by bearish notes from UBS, Merrill Lynch and JP Morgan, which account for about a fifth of the currency markets between them. Merrill cut its March forecasts for the dollar to $1.39 a euro from $1.33 and JP Morgan cut its estimates to $1.37 from $1.30. All three said the dollar is being undermined by the record US current account deficit. As the gap widens, more dollars need to be exchanged for foreign currencies to pay for imports.
Charlie Bean, the chief economist of the Bank of England, warned the large current account and fiscal deficits in the US could trigger "a further - possibly substantial - decline" in the dollar. He said: "At some stage, action will have to be taken to close the US fiscal deficit and when that happens, the real value of the dollar will need to fall if a sharp slowdown is to be avoided there.
"In the mid-1980s, the elimination of the twin US fiscal and current account deficits - then around 3pc of GDP - was accompanied by a fall of around 30pc in the real trade-weighted value of the dollar." Since February 2002, the dollar has only fallen 15pc in real terms. He added that sterling has historically been "relatively stable" in its movement against the dollar and the euro.
Nicolas Sarkozy, the French finance minister, urged the US to cut its twin deficits yesterday, saying "it is absolutely essential so their currency does not skew trade".
The surge in the euro against the dollar sapped German business confidence this month, the country's Ifo economic institute said yesterday. It warned the rise could threaten Europe's largest economy and urged intervention in the currency markets.
Gold will continue to rise as the dollar weakens, analysts predicted, but the price rise has not boosted the share price of gold miners. The FTSE Global Gold Mines Index has fallen this week, and is below its annual high of 1892.90 on January 2, when the gold price stood at $383 an ounce.

Saturday 17 January 2009

Gold to rise for eighth consecutive year




Gold to rise for eighth consecutive year
Gold is set to appreciate for an eighth year as investors seek a refuge from declining interest rates at the same time that central banks inject more cash into the banking system, according to Bloomberg.

Last Updated: 5:38PM GMT 08 Jan 2009

Gold to rise for eight consecutive year Photo: EPA
The metal will average $910 an ounce in 2009, 4.3 per cent more than last year, according to the median forecast of 20 analysts, traders and investors surveyed by Bloomberg. Silver and platinum, which averaged at least 12pc more in 2008, will decline this year, the survey showed.
More than half of those surveyed predict that the price of gold will end the year above $910 – with the four biggest bulls suggesting that a price of $1,000 an ounce will be met by the end of 2009.
Average gold prices have risen for seven consecutive years, the longest winning streak since at least 1949. While the return of 5.8pc through 2008 was the smallest since 2004 in dollar terms, gold rose 1pc in euros and 44pc in sterling, Bloomberg said.
The most bearish analysts were the online trading platform Finotec, bullion dealer Kitco and the bullion banks JP Morgan and Barclays. They all forecast an average price of between 6.3pc and 11.8pc below the average price of $872/oz in 2008.
But Gold & Silver Investments, the bullion dealer, said that many of the bears 'have been bearish for a number of years and have failed to realise that we are in a bull market’.
Gold & Silver Investments added: “Given the deflationary headwinds assailing us early in 2009, they may be proved right this year as further massive deleveraging could affect the gold price. However, we believe this to be unlikely given the massive macroeconomic and systemic risk and increasing monetary and geopolitical risk.
"And we believe that should the deflationary pressures continue throughout 2009, then most commodities and asset classes will again fall sharply in 2009 but gold will again outperform. Importantly, gold also rose during the last bout of sharp deflation in the Great Depression of the 1930s when Roosevelt revalued gold by 60pc and devalued the dollar by 60pc, from $22/oz to $35/oz.”




Monday 12 January 2009

Merrill Lynch says rich turning to gold bars for safety



Merrill Lynch says rich turning to gold bars for safety
Merrill Lynch has revealed that some of its richest clients are so alarmed by the state of the financial system and signs of political instability around the world that they are now insisting on the purchase of gold bars, shunning derivatives or "paper" proxies.

By Ambrose Evans-PritchardLast Updated: 10:32AM GMT 09 Jan 2009

Rich investors are spurning gold exchange traded funds in favour of krugerrands.
Gary Dugan, the chief investment officer for the US bank, said there has been a remarkable change in sentiment. "People are genuinely worried about what the world is going to look like in 2009. It is amazing how many clients want physical gold, not ETFs," he said, referring to exchange trade funds listed in London, New York, and other bourses.
"They are so worried they want a portable asset in their house. I never thought I would be getting calls from clients saying they want a box of krugerrands," he said.
Merrill predicted that gold would soon blast through its all time-high of $1,030 an ounce, and would hit $1,150 by June.
The metal should do well whatever happens. If deflation sets in and rocks the economic system it will serve as a safe-haven, but if massive monetary stimulus gains traction and sets off inflation once again it will also come into its own as a store of value. "It's win-win either way," said Mr Dugan.
He added that deflation may prove the greater risk in coming months. "It's very difficult to get the deflation psychology out of the human brain once prices start falling. People stop buying things because they think it will be cheaper if they wait."
Merrill expects global inflation to hover near zero, with rates of minus 1pc in the industrial economies. This means that yields on AAA sovereign bonds now at 3pc will offer a real return of 4pc a year, which is stellar in this grim climate. "Don't start selling your government bonds," Mr Dugan said, dismissing talk of a bond bubble as misguided.
He warned that the eurozone was likely to come under strain this year as slump deepens. "There is going to be friction as governments in the south start talking politically about coming out of the euro. I don't see the tensions in Greece as a one-off. It is a sign of social strain in countries that have lost competitiveness."





Also read:

Thursday 1 January 2009

A Brief History of Bretton Woods System

Delegates attend the Bretton Woods conference in July of 1944 at the Mt. Washington Hotel in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire
Alfred Eisenstaedt / Time & Life Pictures / Getty


A Brief History of
Bretton Woods System
By M.J. Stephey Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2008

time:http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1852254,00.html
Since the end of World War II, the U.S. dollar has enjoyed a unique and powerful position in international trade. But perhaps no more.


More Related
The Bright Side of Friday’s Dow Drop
Fix It Before It’s Broke
Summer Slump

Before boarding a plane on Saturday to meet President George W. Bush, French President Nicolas Sarkozy proclaimed, "Europe wants it. Europe demands it. Europe will get it." The "it" here is global financial reform, and evidently Sarkozy won't have to wait long. Just hours after their closed-door meeting had finished, Bush and Sarkozy, along with European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, issued a joint statement announcing that a summit would be held next month to devise what Barroso calls a "new global financial order."
The old global financial order is, well, old. Established in 1944 and named after the New Hampshire town where the agreements were drawn up, the Bretton Woods system created an international basis for exchanging one currency for another. It also led to the creation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, now known as the World Bank.
The former was designed to monitor exchange rates and lend reserve currencies to nations with trade deficits, the latter to provide underdeveloped nations with needed capital — although each institution's role has changed over time. Each of the 44 nations who joined the discussions contributed a membership fee, of sorts, to fund these institutions; the amount of each contribution designated a country's economic ability and dictated its number of votes.

In an effort to free international trade and fund postwar reconstruction, the member states agreed to fix their exchange rates by tying their currencies to the U.S. dollar. American politicians, meanwhile, assured the rest of the world that its currency was dependable by linking the U.S. dollar to gold; $1 equaled 35 oz. of bullion. Nations also agreed to buy and sell U.S. dollars to keep their currencies within 1% of the fixed rate. And thus the golden age of the U.S. dollar began.

For his part, legendary British economist John Maynard Keynes, who drafted much of the plan, called it "the exact opposite of the gold standard," saying the negotiated monetary system would be whatever the controlling nations wished to make of it. Keynes had even gone so far as to propose a single, global currency that wouldn't be tied to either gold or politics. (He lost that argument).

Though it came on the heels of the Great Depression and the beginning of the end of World War II, the Bretton Woods system addressed global ills that began as early as the first World War, when governments (including the U.S.) began controlling imports and exports to offset wartime blockades. This, in turn, led to the manipulation of currencies to shape foreign trade. Currency warfare and restrictive market practices helped spark the devaluation, deflation and depression that defined the economy of the 1930s.
The Bretton Woods system itself collapsed in 1971, when President Richard Nixon severed the link between the dollar and gold a decision made to prevent a run on Fort Knox, which contained only a third of the gold bullion necessary to cover the amount of dollars in foreign hands. By 1973, most major world economies had allowed their currencies to float freely against the dollar. It was a rocky transition, characterized by plummeting stock prices, skyrocketing oil prices, bank failures and inflation.
It seems the East Coast might yet again be the backdrop for a massive overhaul of the world's financial playbook.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon publicly backed calls for a summit before the new year, saying the agency's headquarters in New York — the very "symbol of multilateralism" — should play host. Sarkozy concurred, but for different reasons: "Insofar as the crisis began in New York," he said, "then the global solution must be found to this crisis in New York."


Sunday 21 December 2008

Savers seeking solution to financial crisis buy gold

There's gold in them thar' shops: the rush is on
Richard Wray
The Guardian, Thursday 2 October 2008

Tucked away beside the ornate entrance of the Savoy hotel in London are the discreet premises of ATS Bullion. Over the last few days staff there have witnessed an unprecedented phenomenon: queues.
The customers are wary savers looking to build their own solution to the global financial crisis and the parlous state of the banking system. They are buying gold.
"There has been enormous demand," said Sandra Conway, managing director at ATS, one of the UK's leading gold coin and bar merchants. "There are very few sellers of physical gold and we have actually had queues of people today."
The world's makers of gold bars and gold coins are running flat out to try to keep up with this surge in demand, but stocks are dwindling, especially of Krugerrands.
Named after Paul Kruger, who led the Boer resistance to the British at the turn of the 19th century, the coins were first minted in South Africa in 1967. Although it was illegal to import them into the UK during the 1970s and 1980s because of apartheid, they have become one of the most widely circulated gold coins in the world. But the £547 coins are becoming more scarce as investors snap them up.
As a result, the Rand Refinery is now operating seven days a week, as is the Austrian mint, which produces the popular Vienna Philharmonic coin.
The US Mint, responsible for ensuring an adequate supply of American coinage since 1792, has been forced to halt sales of its American Buffalo solid 24 carat gold coin because it was running out of supplies. It is also limiting the availability of its 22 carat American Eagle alternative.
Canny investors had also noticed that both one ounce coins cost less than an ounce of gold on the open market at the time, making them incredibly tempting to anyone looking to make a quick return. Having broken through the $1,000 barrier earlier in the year, the gold price has retreated slightly and is now trading at around $880 an ounce. The 2007 American Eagle one ounce coin, however, was going for $789.95 while the 2006 Buffalo coin cost $800 - offering the potential for an instant return of $80-$90.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/oct/02/banking.economics

Monday 8 December 2008

A Leading Bear Turns Bullish, Sort of

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2008
INTERVIEW

A Leading Bear Turns Bullish, Sort of
Barry Ritholtz, CEO and Director of Equity Research, FusionIQ
By ROBIN GOLDWYN BLUMENTHAL

AN INTERVIEW WITH BARRY RITHOLTZ: Getting ready for a "significant" rally.

FOR THE PAST FIVE YEARS, BARRY RITHOLTZ HAS BEEN entertaining, educating and elucidating readers of his blog, The Big Picture (http://bigpicture.typepad.com/). Among the noteworthy calls that the savvy lawyer and sometime-trader has made: identifying a credit bubble a few years ago, and a recommendation to short AIG back in February, when the share price was flirting with $80; it's now about $1.80.

Chris Casaburi for Barron's

"There's upside here for a trade. Over the past 100 years, we've only seen the relative strength of the S&P 500 drop to this level five times…Each time, it has been a major buying opportunity, although not necessarily a major bottom." –Barry Rithotlz

Lately, the 47-year-old Ritholtz, with his business partner, Kevin Lane, has had a chance to put some of those ideas to work at FusionIQ, a firm that manages nearly $100 million in separate accounts. Amid the wholesale destruction on Wall Street, Fusion has produced single-digit gains on its long-short portfolios, and has kept the average losses on its long-only accounts to single digits. Ritholtz, whose book Bailout Nation is due early next year from McGraw-Hill, can be trusted to call 'em as he sees 'em. To find out what the contrarian is now warming up to, read on.
Barron's: What's your global outlook?

Ritholtz: In 2006, I was probably the most bearish guy on the Street; now at a table of industry people, I'm the bullish guy. We've cut this market in half; that doesn't mean it can't go lower. We're in a medium recession. If this turns into a deeper, more prolonged recession, all bets are off.

Are we are testing a real low here?

There's no doubt we're looking at an extremely oversold market. But by the end of the week, that oversold condition could be worked off. There's upside here for a trade. Over the past 100 years, we've only seen the relative strength of the S&P 500 drop to this level five times, and each time, it has been a major buying opportunity, although not necessarily a major bottom. If you look at 1929, it was a low but it wasn't the low, and there was a bounce. It was the same thing after Sept. 11 -- from Sept. 21, you had a 40% bounce in the Nasdaq before you went down to make all-time lows.

Will the market drift?

It's flapping up and down. There is a significant rally, 20% or 30%, waiting to happen. But there's also the possibility of a lower low, as we get deeper into the recession, if things take a terrible turn for the worse.

Whenever you're fragile, you don't have the ability to absorb that next blow. My fear is that some economic issue arises and you don't have the resiliency to deal with it. We're economically stretched very, very thin. Things seem to be getting healthier at an ungodly cost, one which we will be dealing with the unintended consequences of for decades. We're really at the fork in the road. Everybody on Wall Street is wondering if we're going to see a year-end rally of any substance, or, if we're heading down to 7100 on the Dow, or 850 on the Nasdaq. [On Friday, those indexes were at about 8200 and about 1430, respectively.]

What say you?

We're waiting for a couple more things to line up: Some clarity on earnings, which we won't have for a while, some sort of resolution on these bailouts, and some sign from the new administration that, unlike the outgoing group, we have a plan -- "Here's what we're going to do about credit, banks, the economy, GM." We wouldn't be surprised to see earnings seriously damaged.
Wall Street is still way too high. They started out the year at earnings of $103 a share on the S&P 500 for 2008, which got them to 1600 on the index. We came in at $65 a share, and that may have been too bullish. The good news is that most of corporate America outside of the financial sector has healthy balance sheets, lots of cash, and is running very lean.

Except for the auto industry.

The auto industry is a whole other story. The auto industry is a story of terrible management, misguided unions, and government intervention.

What's your impression of the bank bailout?

[Treasury Secretary] Hank Paulson is really the imperfect messenger for this bailout. Remember that Paulson is one of the five executives who went to the SEC in 2004 to beg, 'Please, let us lever up more. Please let us go to [a leverage ratio of] 30 or 40.' It is bad enough that he helped create the crisis. It appears that this whole response is completely ad hoc.

Do you see any guiding principle?

It is, how do you give money to banks who need capital and not say, 'By the way, you're cutting your dividend.' What's happening instead is they're saying, 'Here is money: Give it out as dividends and bonuses.' It is unbelievable. There is no clawback. It is unconscionable.
So, what does it take to invest in this kind of world? How do you stay out of trouble?

We have a number of internal rules. The most important is that we always have a stop-loss. When the trade is working out, we use trailing stop-loss, meaning that the higher the stock goes, the higher the stop-loss. When the market starts heading south, we get taken out. We screen for short squeezes, and we've found that they're very often present at the beginning of a major move up.

We back-tested [price/earnings ratios] and found they have no forecasting ability. Whenever people do an analysis of a stock, the tendency is to create a snapshot at a given moment. We try to build a moving picture of a stock. For instance, if you know you're in an all-time peak in home sales, and the Fed is in a tightening regime, why own a stock in a homebuilder?

The builders have been pretty beaten down, though.

I've been the biggest bear on housing on the Street for four years now. Housing is halfway through. We're not even close to the bottom in housing. The stocks were always cheap, so it's not a valuation question.

Given the uncertainty in the market at large, what appeals to you right now?

We've been trading the two-to-one leveraged [exchange-traded funds].

One is the Ultra S&P ProShares [ticker: SSO] -- for every dollar the Standard & Poor's 500 moves, it moves two dollars. And there's also Ultra Triple Q ProShares [QLD], the Nasdaq 100-version of the SSO. The flip of the QLDs are the QIDs, which are the negative two-for-ones on the Nasdaq. We're starting to look at that. We are now running about 70% cash, which is inordinately high, but some of the names we're watching, and have owned in the past, are NuVasive [NUVA], a medical-device company, Stanley Works [SWK], a great infrastructure story, LG Display [LPL] and Luminex [LMNX]. Industries we like are infrastructure, defense, biotech and medical devices.

Why ETFs?

We're normally bottom-up stockpickers. But when we're looking at all these individual stocks and war-game them, we end up saying there's this risk and that risk. Here's an example: JPMorgan [JPM] is probably the best house in a bad neighborhood. It had a nice run, then it pulled back; do we want to own JP Morgan? What's the risk? They've already acquired Bear Stearns. They have to be looking at Goldman Sachs [GS]. They have to be looking at putting the house of Morgan back together. If that happens, what happens to the stock price of JPMorgan? You could lose 15%, 20% overnight. Every time we look at individual stocks, we end up with that analysis.

We spent a lot of the year running a good chunk of cash. Some of that is discipline; a lot of that is staying away from things that are really trouble. The trade that caused so much trouble for people -- long financials -- we're at the point where some of the financials are starting to look attractive.

Would you give us a name?

Citigroup [C] at $5. The interesting thing about Citigroup is that if there's anything that's legitimately too big to fail, Citigroup is it. If you think the consumer and retail sector are having a hard time, imagine if Citigroup were allowed to go belly-up. People would hunker down in their homes and stop buying all but the necessities.

I didn't really buy that Bear Stearns was too big to fail, although there was the argument that they could take JPMorgan down. Citibank is one of those things that cannot be allowed to go belly-up. It's enormous. It's the equivalent of AIG.

What else do you like?

We like infrastructure, plays like Stanley Works, and we expect there will be some stimulus to build ports, bridges, and expand the electrical grid. Defense is another sector we like, though it's less so of the Boeing s [BA] and more of the specialty-defense names, like AeroVironment [AVAV], which makes small, pilotless drones.

There's a list of interesting biotech and medical-devices companies, which are insulated from the economic cycle. We just bought Cubist Pharmaceuticals [CBST], which addresses the anti-infective market. In the same way the Internet bubble gave rise to Web 2.0, Facebook and blogs, the Genentechs of the world and all the developments that took place throughout the 1990s have led to the current new wave of specialized therapeutics. Over the next 10 years, we're going to see a universe of breakthroughs based on the previous 20 years' work. The first order of business on Jan. 20 [presidential-inauguration day] is allowing stem-cell research, and that's going to lead to a number of significant breakthroughs. Medical devices and gene therapies are ripe areas. The problem is, they're very volatile and very speculative, and not necessarily safe for the ordinary household.

What stocks are you shorting?

We've been short Jefferies & Co. [JEF] for a while. They're similar to the various asset gatherers: In this environment, it becomes very challenging to hold on to key people. The best guess is, they're suffering along with the rest of the sector, only they don't have the strength or the size to do things that a Goldman Sachs or a Morgan Stanley or Wachovia can.
Table: Ritholtz's Picks

What about gold?

Gold is really quite interesting here, as are the gold miners. We own no gold now, and we own no gold mines, but we are watching them. The question is, at what point does this deflationary cycle roll over to the point where things start to get better?

We were among the loudest inflation hawks for the past few years. When oil was $147 a barrel the joke was, which was going to hit $6 a gallon first, premium gasoline or skim milk?

In March, we said we are through the worst part of the inflation cycle and now we should see deflation as the economy starts to roll over. And that is pretty much playing out. The bugaboo with all that is you just had the Fed triple its balance sheet. The Bernanke printing presses are running full speed. That ultimately has to hurt the U.S. dollar; it ultimately has to be inflationary.

Has gold bottomed?

I don't know where gold bottoms. We recommended gold for the first time in 2002 or 2003. It was strictly an inflation trade, thanks to Greenspan. And then when the GLD gold ETF first came out, we recommended that. Gold has a date with $1,500 somewhere in the future [up from $763 an ounce now], but whether it makes that move from 700 or from 400, I have no idea. You just can't print that much paper and debase the currency and not see some sort of reaction.
Anything else look interesting?

We always tell people when things are really good you have to make emergency plans. You know, the time to read that card on the seatback in front of you is not when the plane is heading down. When things are really awful like they are now, that's when you start making your wish list. I have never owned Berkshire Hathaway [BRK], but if it was cheap enough I'd buy it.

A level, please?

$85,000 to $95,000 [versus $98,000 recently].

Where else might you be deploying some of that cash?

One client said to me, "I'm tired of hearing bad news. I don't care what it is, what can you tell me that is good?" I told him to make a list of things he's wanted to own, but has been afraid to buy or unable to because of the cost. I don't care if it is art, trophy properties, vacation homes, collectible automobiles or boats. Figure out what you are willing to pay, and I can all but guarantee you that by the time we are done with this deflationary cycle, many of those objects will be available at your price. I wouldn't be surprised if, when everything is said and done, a lot of these things are off by 50% or worse.

Thanks, Barry.

http://online.barrons.com/article/SB122852213723784245.html?mod=rss_barrons_this_week_magazine&page=sp

Monday 1 December 2008

Is cash really king?

Buffett makes another prediction, but one that the world’s media did not pick up on. He said that “the policies that government will follow in its efforts to alleviate the current crisis will probably prove inflationary and therefore accelerate declines in the real value of cash accounts”.

Buffett’s point is that the only way that the US – and other Anglo Saxon governments for that matter – is going to get itself out of its debt hole, is by inflating its way out.

In a best case scenario, this only entails sharply rising interest rates and substantial dollar depreciation.

In the worst case, a loss of confidence in banking systems and gold, assuming it is not outlawed, perhaps at $10,000 per ounce.

In both cases, holding cash would be a very bad idea.

In an inflationary environment, as Buffett says, it is best to hold stocks. Just make sure they are ones that will survive.

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Is cash really king?
By Hugh Young
19 November 2008

Holding cash in an inflationary environment is a very bad idea.

On October 17 Warren Buffett wrote in The New York Times that “equities will almost certainly outperform cash over the next decade, probably to a substantial degree”. Amid all the confusion, such a clear and bold prediction is jolting. Cash is king, right? How can Buffett be so sure that equities will mount a royal coup?

Buffett makes another prediction, but one that the world’s media did not pick up on. He said that “the policies that government will follow in its efforts to alleviate the current crisis will probably prove inflationary and therefore accelerate declines in the real value of cash accounts”.

What! Inflation? Wasn’t that yesterday’s story? Oil prices have halved, as have the prices of many other commodities. And anyway, commodity prices never stayed high enough to trigger wage spirals. All they did was cause demand to fall.

Buffett’s point is that the printing presses have been turned on, following years of reckless monetary expansion, and that all the hundreds of billions of extra dollars recently created to prop up the banking system will ultimately feed through to rising prices (remember that inflation is really about money supply. Rising prices are the effect of inflation, not inflation itself).

Taking into account unfunded social security and Medicare obligations, the total US federal debt in 2006 was $49.4 trillion, equivalent to $160,000 for every American. Fast forward two years, during which there was an acceleration of government debt accumulation, and you get close to $300,000 for every working American. If Americans were to set aside, say, 3% of their average annual household income of around $48,000, it would take more than 200 years to pay off the debt.

The conjuring trick here required to create this debt mountain has been to convince people, Americans and foreigners alike, that the dollar, dollar deposits and federal debt are worth something. Spin is provided by implicit government guarantees, and continual reference to the dollar as the world’s de facto reserve currency. As long as there was confidence in the currency, debt (relative to economic activity) could rise forever.

We take for granted that bits of paper (bank notes) and electronic records in computer chips (bank deposits) have “value” to such an extent that it is impossible to imagine it any other way or, worse, the entire system collapsing. Article one, section 10, of the United States Constitution states that “no state shall…coin money; emit bills of credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts”.

Why were the founding fathers so against paper money (fiat currency)? Because they were aware that, throughout history, every single state-controlled fiat currency system had ultimately failed. The temptations to create money out of nothing could never be resisted, leading to the corruption of politicians and the elite and unsustainable wealth disparity between rich and poor.

George Washington had noted in 1787 that “paper money has had the effect to ruin commerce, oppress the honest, and open the door to every species of fraud and injustice”. Later, in 1798, Thomas Jefferson wrote that the federal government has no power “of making paper money or anything else a legal tender”, and he advocated a constitutional amendment to enforce this principle by denying the federal government the power to borrow.

In days gone by money or, as it is also known, “IOUs”, developed naturally in the market. The best medium for these IOUs was gold coins as they were difficult to fake (gold is heavy, sufficiently scarce, expensive to extract and impossible to synthesise below its market value). But governments soon took control, often by guaranteeing the quality and purity of the coins. As governments outspent their revenues, they found ways to counterfeit the currency by reducing the amount of gold in the coins, hoping their subjects would not discover the fraud. But the people always did, and they tended to react badly.

What is happening today is no different. For money to be considered legal tender it must have a maker (person that will make the payment), a payee (person that will receive the payment), an amount to be paid, and a due date. Dollar bills used to state that the bearer would be paid on demand. In 1963 these words were removed.

By the same token the creation of bank deposits involves even less work than notes and coins, which at least require machines with moving parts. To create bank deposits, a bank simply needs to find someone to lend to, then punches a number into a computer. Boosh! A bank deposit! Even if the borrower spends the money such that it ends up in another bank, it’s still in the system.

When President Nixon closed the gold window in 1971, refusing, as promised under the Bretton Woods Agreement, to exchange dollars for one thirty fifth of an ounce of gold (there was not enough gold in the coffers), the stage was set for massive and unconstrained monetary expansion. Under Bretton Woods, credit as a percentage of GDP had been maintained at around 150%. From 1980 to 2007, it rose from 162% to 334%. The last 30 years have been one huge, credit-fuelled party. But the booze has now run out and the hangovers are just beginning.

Buffett’s point is that the only way that the US – and other Anglo Saxon governments for that matter – is going to get itself out of its debt hole, is by inflating its way out. In a best case scenario, this only entails sharply rising interest rates and substantial dollar depreciation. In the worst case, a loss of confidence in banking systems and gold, assuming it is not outlawed, perhaps at $10,000 per ounce. In both cases, holding cash would be a very bad idea. In an inflationary environment, as Buffett says, it is best to hold stocks. Just make sure they are ones that will survive.

Hugh Young is the Singapore-based managing director of Aberdeen Asset Management Asia.
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