A Valuable Backstop for Wealthy
Investors
by
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Friday 9 May, 2008
"...Why are
wealthy investors swapping gold futures for physical metal that they own
outright...?"
A LITTLE LESS
than 12 months ago, the world's biggest financial players suddenly found they
could not turn some $1.3 trillion of their assets into cash.
These assets – bonds backed by US home-buyers with low (or
no) incomes – had become utterly illiquid. No one would buy or lend against
them, not at any price. And an asset you can't sell or borrow against is worth
precisely nothing.
The resulting mayhem? It would have
sounded frivolous two years ago. But the subprime
crisis caused the first run on a British bank run in 130 years, a forced
collapse in US interest rates, and the fire-sale of Wall Street's fifth largest
investment bank for just 16¢ on the dollar.
"[Now] it seems that the financial system is slowly
working its way through this subprime shock,"
writes Gillian Tett in the Financial Times. "The largest banks and institutions have
written off almost $200 billion and raised more than
$100bn-odd of capital to plug this gap.
"Indeed, the write-downs have been so vast that some
analysts expect to see some write ups in the next set of results."
Crisis over? That key marker of
investor anxiety, the Gold
Price, fell 15% from its top of mid-March to the end of April. The
preceding surge had taken gold bullion up from $650 per ounce in August to
above $1,030 the day after Bear Stearns was sold to J.P.Morgan.
The proximate cause for gold's jump – and then setback – was
the Federal Reserve's decision to slash US interest rates. Gold turned sharply higher as the Fed
began cutting rates in Aug. '07. It only flagged when Fed policy-makers implied
a pause in their war against the Dollar (albeit it temporary) seven months
later.
Cheap money and the inflation it causes makes
gold bullion an attractive asset. Central bankers can't print it; investment
bankers can't promote it to destruction. But "in addition to being
generally positive for gold prices, the credit crisis brought counterparty risk
to the fore," as Nikos Kavalis of the GFMS consultancy in London
reminded us here at BullionVault by phone this week.
That's why a significant portion of new Gold Investment since last summer has
gone into physical metal – owned outright – rather
than simply into paper promises or credit arrangements.
"In many cases, we've actually seen investors moving
away from positions they already had in place, moving out of both unallocated
accounts and gold derivatives, and into allocated metal," says Nikos.
"Largely as a result of the crisis in the credit
markets, a number of high net worth individuals have invested in physical
gold."
Unallocated gold is the gold market's major concession to
financial trickery (a.k.a. "innovation"). Merely a book-entry on a
credit ledger, it works much the same as a bank account – only without deposit
insurance – representing a loan from the buyer to the brokerage.
That leaves the investor very much "on risk" with
regards to the brokerage's financial survival. And it's been estimated to us
here at BullionVault
that well over 95% of the world's daily gold dealing is still done on an
"unallocated" basis.
What makes physical bullion stand out for the growing number
of private investors choosing outright ownership instead? Gold futures or
options would, after all, give them leverage to the gold price, super-charging
their gains if they call the short-term direction correctly.
But leverage pays nothing if your counterparty defaults. And
for investors with money to lose, physical gold bullion sits in a much-needed
asset class all of its own.
First, the physical Gold Market centered in London
is one of the deepest and most liquid capital markets in the world. Turning
bullion into cash is easiest for investors dealing warranted gold bars. Kept in
professional storage to retain maximum resale value, gold held in the form of
these large 400-ounce bars also avoids wide dealing spreads and commission
fees, too.
Repeated studies also prove gold's safe-haven appeal on the
basis of its "non-correlation" with securitized assets, such as
equities and bonds. Gold Prices move
independently of the broader financial markets – neither together, nor in
opposition. This lack of correlation makes gold a crucial component of any diversified
portfolio.
Finally, physical gold bullion – provided that it is owned
outright – is unique amongst tradable assets; because it's almost entirely
devoid of counterparty risk. You'd be surprised how many investors, both
private and professional, fail to realize the difference.
Owning the metal outright – whether as gold coins in your
pocket or large bars held securely in market-approved storage – takes you
"off risk" with regards to the solvency of banks and brokerages. And
it leaves you holding a highly liquid physical asset that's instantly valued
just by checking the Gold Spot Price
online.
"While the subprime shock may
be ebbing," continues Gillian Tett in the Financial Times, "the problem is
that...as the US
economy slows, there is a good chance defaults will soon emanate from the
corporate and consumer debt world.
"And the more that banks are
forced to tighten credit as a result of the subprime
mess or other losses, the greater the risk that this second wave of defaults
will emerge – creating the risk of a vicious spiral."
The current lull in the Gold Price says
fewer investors are worried today. But only this week, Moody's Investors
Service – one of the three credit-ratings agencies now blamed for letting investment
banks issue toxic subprime bonds as
"triple-A" bonds – warned of a
sharp rise in US corporate-bond failures. It sees the default rate on low-rated
junk bonds quadrupling to 4% by the end of this year.
Wherever the subprime shock has
hit hardest, municipal debt also looks weak. Council members in Vallejo,
California voted on Tuesday to file for bankruptcy, thanks in no small part to
"house prices in Vallejo and the surrounding area falling some 26% on a
year ago," reports The Independent here
in London. "The city is expecting $1.6 million less in property sales
taxes."
And all this while – 12 months on from the first trouble at
UBS and Bear Stearns – the final cost of the subprime
shock itself is still pending. Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke originally put a $100 billion forecast. The
International Monetary Fund (IMF) has since set the ceiling at $945bn.
But there are hidden costs too, as Bloomberg reports this
week. Now State Street, the world's biggest institutional fund manager, faces
more than $625 million in lawsuit damages, for instance, after being sued by
four insurance companies for putting their cash into subprime
bonds without their approval.
Let's imagine all of your wealth is sitting safely outside the
next subprime-style blow up. A loss of confidence in
one sector can still become a system-wide crisis. And the failure of subprime bonds to pay up should have reminded us all that
counterparty risk remains very real, no matter how clever derivatives salesmen
become.
A growing number of private investors, in contrast, would
rather hold at least some of their wealth in a liquid, tradable asset, entirely
free from the risk of default. What price they pay should depend on what they
think will happen to interest rates.
But the value of Gold
as a portfolio back-stop remains hard to beat, even 15% below the last all-time
high of mid-March.
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Gold
price chart, no delay | Free Report: 5 Myths of
the Gold Market
Formerly City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London
and head of editorial at the UK's
leading financial advisory for private investors, Adrian Ash is the editor of Gold News and head of research at BullionVault
– where you can Buy Gold Today
vaulted in Zurich on $3 spreads and
0.8% dealing fees.
(c) BullionVault 2008
Please Note: This
article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best
place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk.
Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events –
and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.