The Enduring Popularity of Gold
Commodities / Gold and Silver 2012 Feb 22, 2012 - 03:15 AM GMTBy: Frank_Holmes
	
	
  
The World  Gold Council (WGC) reaffirmed the power of the Love Trade in its 2011 Gold  Demand Trends report released this week. Gold demand grew 0.4 percent in 2011  despite a 28 percent year-over-year increase in bullion’s average price.
  
After  flirting with the top spot for some time, China  emerged as the world’s largest gold market for jewelry and investment during  the fourth quarter of 2011 as demand in India weakened. This is the first  time China’s demand outpaced  India’s  in 11 quarters. However, India  did retain the gold demand crown for the entire year, purchasing 933 tons  compared to China’s  demand of 770 tons.
  
 

I always  say the trend is your friend, and I believe China’s increasing demand for gold  is one trend that is just getting started. Although gold imports from Hong Kong  were cut in half in December, HSBC Global Research reports that overall gold  imports from Hong Kong were 10 times the  historical average from January through November 2011. HSBC expects a continued  rise in Chinese incomes will keep demand at a robust pace. The WGC sees  domestic demand for gold jewelry and investment driving 20 percent growth in  Chinese gold demand during 2012.
  China should consider its leadership  as the No. 1 gold market a short-term position, though. While China’s presence in the bullion market is strong  and growing for jewelry and investment, India’s ancient relationship with  the yellow metal is such that “domestic drivers of demand are largely  independent of outside forces,” says the WGC. The WGC does not see India’s role in  the gold market diminishing over the long term.
  Ajay  Mitra, the WGC’s managing director for the Middle East and India, recently expressed India’s strong ties with gold in a 60 Minutes feature. Gold has always been a part of India’s  history, culture and tradition. I have witnessed firsthand the strength of this  bond many times over the years. As the famous saying goes, “no gold, no  wedding.”
  Don’t  Forget About the Fear Trade
  The Fear  Trade was also recently reaffirmed by the Federal Reserve when it publicly  stated its intention to keep inflation at “exceptionally low levels” through  2014. Inflation is the kryptonite to the Fed’s monetary efforts and it’s likely  the Fed will take any measures necessary to prevent inflation spikes.
  The Fed  has targeted a 2 percent inflation rate, which means the U.S. dollar will lose  33 percent of its value over the next 20 years, says The Daily Reckoning’s  Charles Kadlec. In the next four years alone, nearly 10 percent of the “value  of Americans’ hard earned savings” will be destroyed, says Charles. Put another  way, Charles estimates that it will take $150 in the year 2032 to purchase the  same amount of goods you could get for $100 in 2012.
For four decades following the end of the  gold standard, the purchasing power of the dollar has been plunging: A dollar  worth 100 cents in 1970 is now valued at a measly 18 cents. 

Charles  isn’t the only one opposed to the Fed’s “monetary manipulation.” In his latest  letter to shareholders, Warren Buffett faults the government and its “systemic  forces” for destroying the purchasing power of investors. He argues stock  investments offer the best long-term investment opportunity because interest  rate levels don’t offset the loss of purchasing power due to inflation.
However, there  is one group that benefits from the low interest rate environment—borrowers.  This means the largest borrowers in the world, developed world governments,  will be able to service their enormous amounts of debt more easily. This year  alone, the U.S., Japan and Europe  will roll over $8 trillion in federal debt.

CIBC  World Markets sees the secular bull market in gold continuing for “several  years,” as the firm believes debt in major economies has reached a point “where  financial and economic pressures will manifest themselves in ways that have up  until now only been dreamed about.” With these manifestations, Ian McAvity  equates gold to insurance. He suggests to readers that they wouldn’t cancel  fire insurance because their house hasn’t had a fire. “Gold proffers the best  ability to protect long-term purchasing power against deliberate devaluation of  the paper alternatives,” he concludes.
  For  evidence of this, one needs to look no further than the significant gold  purchases by central banks over the past few years. Emerging markets’ central  banks have been the strongest buyers, experiencing a record increase in gold  purchases last year. After building up their reserves during most of the  post-World War II period, central banks’ gold holdings remained stable.  Following the end of the cold war, they began a selling spree, helping to  “explain bullion’s profound price weakness” during the 1990s, says HSBC Global  Research.
  The trend  started to reverse about the same time the Fed cut interest rates in 2007, says  Adrian Ash from Bullionvault. Now, total gold holdings sit at a six-year high  with the total current amount of gold reserves sitting around 31,000 tons. In  2011 alone, the WGC says central banks had a net purchase of 440 tons, the  highest figure since 1964.
  The WGC  says central banks are concerned about the creditworthiness and low yields of  their existing reserve assets held in dollars and the euro. Their solution:  diversify with gold.
  Value  is in the Eye of the Beholder
  In Bangkok Thailand,  the Buddhist temple Wat Traimit is home to the largest golden Buddha in the  world. In its lotus position, the statue is over 15 feet tall and weighs five  tons; if it were solid gold, it would account for 3 percent of the world’s  mined gold.
For two  centuries, the statue was thought to be worthless because it was covered in  plaster to protect the figure from a Burmese attack.
As the  story goes, when the Buddha was moved to a new temple in the 1950s, it slipped  from the crane and fell. That night, a monk dreamed the statue was divinely  inspired, which prompted him to visit the Buddha image. Through a crack in the  plaster, he saw a glint of yellow and the statue’s true beauty was revealed. At  today’s price of gold, the Buddha is worth more than $277 million.
  Sometimes  the true value of things isn’t always apparent. Like the Golden Buddha, the  true value of gold miners has remained hidden while the price of bullion has  shined. CIBC noted in its February report that gold equities have “undergone  significant multiple compression and now trade well below historical averages.”
  Here’s  just one illustration of how cheap gold stocks appear compared to gold. The  yellow line represents the number of gold and silver index units that can be  purchased with one ounce of gold. While the historical ratio averaged 4.5,  today an investor can buy more than 8 units of the XAU to one ounce of gold. In  other words, shares of gold mining companies can be purchased at one of the  cheapest levels in nearly 30 years.

Dave  Rosenberg from Gluskin Sheff also favors gold equities. He particularly likes  miners who can grow production and reserves while keeping costs under control.  “Because input costs tend to be more positively correlated in the early years  of a rally, history has shown that the equities tend to dramatically outperform  the bullion in the later stages of a gold bull market.” He suggests buying  undervalued gold mining stocks in politically safe areas with higher-grade  projects and a relatively simple way of extracting the metal.
  For thousands of years, pharaohs,  explorers, rulers and investors have been attracted to gold, as the precious  metal has been a vital tool in building and protecting wealth. While gold  naysayers focus on the day-to-day fluctuations in price, I believe gold  equities and bullion will continue to enjoy “maximum popularity,” as the Oracle  of Omaha puts it, for years to come. The allure of gold—whether it is from Fear  or Love—cannot be underestimated.
U.S.  Global Investors, Inc. is an investment management firm specializing in gold,  natural resources, emerging markets and global infrastructure opportunities  around the world. The company, headquartered in San Antonio,  Texas, manages 13 no-load mutual funds in the U.S.  Global Investors fund family, as well as funds for international clients.
For more updates on global investing from Frank and the rest of the U.S. Global Investors team, follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/USFunds or like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/USFunds. You can also watch exclusive videos on what our research overseas has turned up on our YouTube channel at www.youtube.com/USFunds.
By Frank Holmes
  
  CEO and Chief Investment Officer
  
  U.S.  Global Investors
U.S. Global Investors, Inc. is an investment management firm specializing in gold, natural resources, emerging markets and global infrastructure opportunities around the world. The company, headquartered in San Antonio, Texas, manages 13 no-load mutual funds in the U.S. Global Investors fund family, as well as funds for international clients.
All opinions expressed and data provided are subject to change without notice. Some of these opinions may not be appropriate to every investor.
Standard deviation is a measure of the dispersion of a set of data from its mean. The more spread apart the data, the higher the deviation. Standard deviation is also known as historical volatility. All opinions expressed and data provided are subject to change without notice. Some of these opinions may not be appropriate to every investor. The S&P 500 Stock Index is a widely recognized capitalization-weighted index of 500 common stock prices in U.S. companies. The NYSE Arca Gold BUGS (Basket of Unhedged Gold Stocks) Index (HUI) is a modified equal dollar weighted index of companies involved in gold mining. The HUI Index was designed to provide significant exposure to near term movements in gold prices by including companies that do not hedge their gold production beyond 1.5 years. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index is a free float-adjusted market capitalization index that is designed to measure equity market performance in the global emerging markets. The U.S. Trade Weighted Dollar Index provides a general indication of the international value of the U.S. dollar.
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