Gold
2009: The Story So Far
by Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Friday, 15
May 2009
Whether inflation or deflation strikes, a
growing number of people are fast buying gold for defence...
IT'S COMMON KNOWLEDGE that gold bullion proved the most
reliable wealth-store during the vicious inflation of the late 1970s. Yet
almost un-noticed, gold has once again been the best-performing asset bar none
this decade, too.
Gold has
dominated the 21st century so far, in fact – something which will look plain to
future investors, although only a handful appreciate it today.
Whether
gold can now extend or repeat this performance, of course, is less clear. But
"People rightly buy
gold when they fear inflation ahead," as William Rees-Mogg, a keen historian of gold, puts it. And just as during
the Great Depression of the 1930s, many people now fear inflation, sparked by
the very threat of deflation driving government interventions and central-bank
money creation.
That's why
global demand for gold jumped throughout 2008, rising 26% on the GFMS
consultancy's data, just as the US, British and Swiss central banks moved to
begin quantitative easing – a.k.a. printing money.

Gold Prices had already trebled
and more against the world's major currencies, gaining an average 14% per annum
in Sterling terms since the start of 2000.
Yet gold
still remains a "fringe" asset class for most funds and advisors.
High-margin offers and outright scams are starting to trap the unwary, while
good information about how to buy, own and trade the metal remains scarce. Quite
how much of your wealth you allocate to this "ultimate insurance" is
something to decide for yourself. But buying and selling gold can now be much
simpler and safer than during gold's last multi-year run. It should be
dramatically cheaper as well.
The story so far
The spark for this decade's bull market in gold? It came from the huge central-bank
gold sales of the late 1990s. Because whatever Gordon Brown sells, a few
bloody-minded investors agreed, must be worth buying. It wasn't just the UK
Treasury, however.
Gold sales
by those central banks about to join the Euro reached such levels, they signed
a deal (the so-called Washington Agreement) to cap annual sales and limit
uncertainty on the open-market price. (Renewed in 2004, the Central Bank Gold
Agreement expires in September this year. Annual sales undershot the 500-tonne
ceiling by one-third or more in both 2007 and 2008. The Agreement may be rolled
over to accommodate the sale of 400 tonnes by the International Monetary Fund
(IMF), first proposed in February 2008.)
At the same
time, in the mid- to late-90s, the Financial
Times and Economist both declared
"the death of gold", tempting a similar fate to the famous
"death of equities" cover published by BusinessWeek just before the US
stock market began its two-decade bull market of the 1980s and '90s. The
Dot.Com Crash that followed between 2000 and 2003 led a growing number of
people to seek out alternative wealth stores. Whilst institutional funds
overwhelmingly chose fixed-income bonds, a growing number of private investors
began to buy gold, especially as the central bank fix – led by the Bank of
Japan and US Federal Reserve – was to encourage a tide of cheap credit into all
asset markets via (then) record-low interest rates of just 1.0%.
This flood
of money washed into house prices, debt investments and emerging stock markets,
and it also pushed Gold
higher thanks to two key events:
1. Leveraged speculation
Financed by the prime brokerage departments of the big investment banks,
hedge funds the world over piled into gold derivatives as interest rates fell
behind inflation in the middle of this decade. Between 2004 and 2008, they
doubled the outstanding volume of US futures and options contracts, for
instance, helping gold prices to double as well.
2. Exchange-traded gold funds (gold ETFs)
As early as 1999, research for mine-industry marketing group the World
Gold Council (WGC) showed that very large investment portfolios could have made
better returns with reduced risk if they had included a four to seven per cent
allocation to gold, even during the gold bear market of the previous two
decades. Many retirement and mutual funds, however, were blocked under the
terms of their deeds from owning physical property, especially in the United States, and derivatives were seen as too
risky.
How could
these large institutions gain exposure to gold prices? The WGC responded by
sponsoring a series of funds that hold physical gold bullion in trust,
securitising it for shareholders and thus tracking the gold price. First
launched in Australia in 2003, and soon followed by South Africa, the UK and then the United States, these exchange-traded gold funds
(gold ETFs) can be traded only during stock market
hours. They charge 0.40% per year for storage (typically at HSBC's
bank vaults in London), reducing the gold backing each share down to 98.3% and below of
the nominal value.
Already surging by 30% in 2009 to a total valuation of $38
billion, Gold ETFs are clearly attracting significant new allocations
from mainstream pension and mutual funds. Yet the metal remains
"institutionally under-owned" according to James Montier,
London strategist for Societe Generale. Pointing to
conflicting signals about whether the global economy now faces inflation or
deflation, Montier recommends gold as
"insurance" against both outcomes. Because while "gold is the
one currency that can't be debased" by inflationary policy, "a
significant prolonged deflation would see what's left of our financial system
likely to collapse. Holding a money substitute isn't such a bad idea against
this cataclysmic outcome."
A case of mistaken
identity
Several big-name hedge fund managers have also taken
sizeable positions in gold so far this year, including John Paulson of Paulson
& Co. (who bet against sub-prime mortgages in 2007) and David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital
(who bet against Lehman Brothers' stock while publicising
its 40-to-1 leverage). But the broader universe of hedge-fund investors, however,
has been pulling in the other direction, reducing their exposure to gold amid
the collapse of Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch and then Lehman Brothers. Gold
futures and options were sold off alongside crude oil, emerging markets and
non-Dollar currencies as hedge funds were forced to unwind their leveraged positions,
first by their investment-bank brokers raising the level of margin calls and
rolling costs, before withdrawing credit entirely, but also by their clients
withdrawing funds and demanding redemptions.

Call it "mistaken identity", as John Hathaway of
Tocqueville Asset Management has said. Because while the boom in gold
derivatives required credit that was both cheap and
freely available, physical gold in contrast only grew more attractive as the
banking crisis wore on.
No one's
obligation and no one's liability, gold owned outright is quite
literally the opposite of debt,
giving you the same tangible security as owning real estate free of a mortgage,
but instantly priced in a 24-hour international market with deep liquidity. London's gold bullion market, still the
centre of professional gold-dealing worldwide, turns over $60 billion per day,
and this wholesale dealing in physical gold
would be the least likely market to lose liquidity in a true financial crisis.
That's why, largely as a result of the crisis in the credit markets, a small
but growing number of high-net worth individuals have already begun investing
heavily in physical metal.
Rush to physical gold
By March 2008, the very earliest gold buyers had seen its
price move from $250 above $1,000 an ounce, making newspaper headlines
alongside the collapse of Northern Rock, Countrywide and Bear Stearns. Come
July of last year, a sharp drop in price from the all-time dollar-high then
drove many existing physical gold owners, especially coin buyers, to accumulate
more gold as the world economy slowed and financial markets went into a
tailspin. The leading metals refineries, however, weren't expecting a rush
until the usual autumn-time spree, typically driven by India's
usual post-harvest surge of gold buying at Diwali.
(Rural India
has no formal banking system, so "investment" gold jewellery acts as a hard-money savings account for many
millions of people, making India
the world's No.1 consumer market.)
Last summer's sudden jump in gold-coin demand also caught
the world's largest mints napping as well, and so their clients, especially
coin shops in Germany,
the UK and United
States, hit a genuine shortage of gold coins
and bars. The upshot today is that gold-coin supplies remain tight the world
over, pushing the average premium charged above professional "spot"
market prices by US retail dealers up from five to ten per cent and more – even
for the most heavily-minted coins such as the South Africa Krugerrand.
(The Rand Refinery has issued well over 50 million gold Krugers
since launching in 1969. So there's little rarity value compared to the plain
"lump" of gold you can buy in large bar form.) German-based Heraeus says furnaces worldwide are still booked solid to
try and catch up. But with stock-market investors still bruised after the crash
of 2008, demand from new buyers only continues to grow, thanks not least to
"the biggest interest-rate cuts in history...an unprecedented fiscal
expansion," as Gordon Brown put it at the recent G20 summit in London.
Injecting $5 trillion into the world economy between them by
2010, the world's leading economies are receiving "more money than ever
before," said Brown. These historic doses of cash, plus the money creation
of quantitative easing, lead many new and existing gold buyers to feel that
"price falls should be seen as buying opportunities," say London
professional dealers Mitsui, "given the impact of global spending programs
on long-term inflation."
The plan, remember, is to reflate
the economy – and asset prices – by weakening the value of money. That's what
central banks mean by "fighting deflation". The concern amongst gold
investors, however, is that reflation will tip into
inflation long before global spending programs and central-bank money creation face any genuine attempts to cap, curb or reduce
them.
The last decade of Gold Prices might then
prove only a prelude to the price gains ahead.
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
A version of this article
first appeared in Investment International magazine.
Gold price chart, no delay | Gold in 2009
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 – winner of the Queen's Award
for Enterprise Innovation, 2009 – where you can Buy Gold Today vaulted in
Zurich on $3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.
(c) BullionVault 2009
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.