Monday, November 30, 2009

All That Glitters

Gold has become front-page investment news lately and I think it’s time to shed some light on the shiny metal that has no industrial purpose. We do have exposure to gold in our portfolios through the ETF SPDR Gold Trust (GLD). We have been holding gold since late 2007 and have recently reduced this exposure a bit. This is not a comment on our view but rather a rational decision based on correlation and reality. Gold over the long haul has a low or negative return (depending on how you measure it and if you adjust for inflation). Although many consider gold a hedge against pretty much everything, including currency devaluations, political and social unrest, and inflation, I believe this conventional view is flawed. Statistics do not prove that gold is a very good hedge. Actually, stock indices seem to outperform gold and outperform inflation (of course with greater volatility). On an inflation-adjusted basis, gold is still 50% below its all-time high set almost three decades ago while stocks, even after two 50% declines in that period, are up around 1000%.

In fact, it seems uncertain why gold should rise during inflationary times other than demand from other investors. For example, gold is up 33.5% YTD but inflation is down 2%. If gold prices are predicting future inflation then so should bonds, which should sell-off during periods of inflation, and TIPS, which move on inflation expectations. However, both are greatly unchanged from year ago levels and are down from earlier this year.

What is driving gold these days is something I call “investment demand for gold.” This phenomenon changed fair value for stocks in the 80s when anyone with a 401(k) or IRA needed to buy stocks regardless of the price. With the advent of easier ways to hold and own gold, portfolios are being reallocated to include gold in their asset mix. This is creating a new source of demand. Whether investors determine 5% or 25% is the appropriate portfolio holding is unclear. But until those portfolio shifts are completed gold will be supported. Once this shift has completed, gold should move less in line with stocks and more on diversification and correlation principals if not on inflation fears, political unrest and currency devaluations. Signs are on the horizon that this day is closer than you might think.

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