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Gold ETF to Test Retail Investor Demand
By IndexFunds.com Staff
An impending Exchange-Traded Fund based on gold is stirring debate over whether
it will make gold so easy to own that a flood of new retail investors will send
the precious metal skyward. Not all gold watchers are convinced, but the timing
is intriguing as global political relations strain and deflation threatens assets
everywhere.
Most individual investors today buy gold indirectly through stocks of mining
operations or in the form of coins or bullion. Gold industry consortium World
Gold Council hopes the impending launch this year of its Equity Gold Trust (NYSE:GLD) will attract a new breed of retail investors who want direct exposure to
gold in their portfolio without taking delivery of actual gold bars.
"It could be very bullish for gold because I think it will be used for
efficient portfolio diversification," said Jay Taylor, editor of J. Taylor's Gold
and Technology Stocks newsletter. "People should really be owning gold,
at least a little bit of it, because it is so negatively correlated to equities
and bonds and the dollar, even more than real estate. It doesn't take much gold
buying to drive the price up. The amount of gold in the world is miniscule compared
to the amount of paper sloshing around."
Unless the new ETF drums up new customers it could be a hard sell among many
of today's gold buyers. Wayne Lemonier, senior account representative at Jefferson
Coin & Bullion, a leading bullion dealer, is bullish on gold but said his
customers want the security of physical metal. "Owning physical gold is
in our view an insurance policy," he said. Against what? "Collapse
of the dollar. You can go to Argentina or Mexico or postwar Germany where the
Mark became worthless. I had a client who sent me 1,000 German Marks from 1922
and 1923, and they are actually worthless. Had these people converted to gold
German Marks they would have preserved all their wealth."
The main argument for the ETF's success is that indirect marketing and distribution
in the brokerage industry has hampered gold's adoption by most investors. One
Quick and Reilly broker said most retail investors get their exposure to gold
mutual funds but noted that these are inevitably baskets of mining operations.
For instance, the popular Franklin Gold Fund's top holdings are Barrick Gold,
Newmont Mining, Anglo American Platinum ADR, Anglo American Platinum ADR, Harmony
Gold Mining and various other South African, Australian and Canadian extraction
firms. They have gold reserves in the ground, but how easily they can mine and
extract them is at issue.
Aside from buying funds, "most customers want to take physical possession
because they view the metal as an investment of last resort when war breaks
out," he confirmed.
What would happen if a concerted marketing effort supported the notion of direct
gold investment in the form of a security? After a "quiet period"
required during SEC scrutiny of its proposed ETF, the World Gold Council is
expected to roll out a huge US marketing campaign and to promote heavily to
stock brokers.
It's not impossible to buy gold without taking delivery. At coin dealer www.kitco.com,
for instance, investing in a "pool" of gold pegged to spot markets
carries a rather modest 1% spread between buy and sell prices. But the firm
is a far cry from being a national brokerage firm with a supermarket of financial
services.
Brokerage firms also handle gold sales with futures commodities contracts, and
often that requires that an investor be accredited - experienced, tolerant of
risk and wealthy.
The ability to buy and sell in a moment's notice, the hallmark of ETFs, is
expected to be especially valued by gold investors, since the precious metal
recently has been volatile in reaction to terrorism news and uncertainty of
global economic recovery. Gold prices started the year above $340 an ounce,
jumped to $380 by February, but slid down to nearly $320 only to rise past $360
again by June.
As an asset class the precious metal has a mixed record. It has been negatively
correlated with US equities during the past 10 years and thus valuable as a
tool for diversification. It has also performed well in the past three years
of market turmoil while equities have floundered. But skeptics note that gold
has underperformed broad equity markets badly for several decades and is not
an engine of economic productivity.
Jefferson Coin's Lemonier feels the threat of deflation carries with it the
seeds of increased money supply, universally associated with inflation. "The
Fed has so much as said if we are faced with a deflationary period we have this
technology called a printing press" to increase the money supply, he said.
"They have never said that openly before but they are now."
06/11/2003
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