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| [Orchid] What to Make of Gold's $500 Run | ||
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From: byzantia Date: Fri Dec 02 03:59:42 2005 |
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========[ Invite a Friend - http://www.ganoksin.com/invite.htm ]======== an interesting article in the Wall Street Journal on the price of gold. Lisa, Topanga, CA USA What to Make of Gold's $500 Run By DAVID A. GAFFEN THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ONLINE December 1, 2005 http://online.wsj.com/ This week in Asian trading, gold futures touched $500 an ounce for the first time in 18 years. And while the precious metal has failed to close above the psychologically important milestone, it is well within striking distance on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. Analysts think the rally may have more room to run. Here's what they have to say about the most recent gold rush. Q: Why is gold rallying? A: Concern about inflation is the biggest reason. The Federal Reserve has raised interest rates for 12 consecutive meetings, and the European Central Bank was widely expected to raise its key rate Thursday for the first time in years. Investors typically turn to hard assets like gold when they think accelerating price growth could be a problem. Market watchers cite other reasons for gold's long climb: For one, the metal has become more popular with investors looking to diversify their portfolios, particularly for those searching for undervalued assets outside of the oil, stock and real-estate markets. Also contributing to gold's gains: steady demand for gold jewelry. About three-quarters of world gold consumption is used to produce jewelry. Overall, world-wide gold consumption through the third quarter of 2005 was $38.4 billion, up 25% from 2004, according to the World Gold Council, a London-based marketing group that represents the gold-mining industry. In dollar terms, through the third quarter, investment in gold is up 73% year-over-year, the council says. In terms of actual gold tons, investment has increased 62%. Q. Who is buying all of this gold? A. Demand for jewelry has traditionally been strong -- and remains so -- in the U.S., India and China. Meanwhile, investments in gold -- which refers to gold purchases other than jewelry and commercial use -- have been rising sharply. Investments are expected to rise 62% in 2005 in terms of tonnage after a 56% increase in 2004. That includes hoarding bars and investing in coins. Investor demand is up 11% year-over-year in India, according to the gold-mining trade group. In the Middle East, investment demand has risen 38% on an annualized basis. Meanwhile, representatives of central banks in South Africa, Russia and Argentina recently said they are considering increasing their proportion of gold reserves. Those banks have 9%, 3.6%, and 3% of their reserves in gold, respectively, compared with 64% for the U.S. and 50% for Germany. Q: What's the best way to invest in gold? A: Buying and holding actual gold bars would be cumbersome. Professional investors often use the futures market. But since investing in the futures market is foreign territory for many individual investors, those looking to make a bet on gold traditionally bought mining stocks or mutual funds that invested in several mining stocks. Mining stocks are problematic, though, says Peter Grandich of the Grandich Letter, a mining and metals publication, because they not only reflect the rising price of gold, but also the state of mining operations and the company's financial condition. New avenues like exchange-traded funds, which act like mutual funds but trade throughout the market day like stocks, offer a more direct path to investing in gold. At the end of 2003, ETFs like the iShares Comex Gold Trust and State Street's StreetTracks Gold Shares accounted for just 12% of retail investment in gold; they now comprise about 30% of the market, according to the World Gold Council. Through the third quarter of 2005, ETF investments were $1.73 billion, compared with just $250 million in the first three quarters of 2004. The shares in an ETF such as iShares Comex Gold Trust roughly track the price of gold futures. INFLATION BET? Go Figure: Investing in gold with mutual funds and ETFs Q: Does this rally mean investors are too late to the party? A: Big round numbers like $500 don't carry much more than psychological value, though crossing such milestones often nudges investors to cash out, says Mr. Grandich. On an inflation-adjusted basis, gold's record of $847 an ounce in 1980 is equivalent to about $1,930 in today's dollars, using the seasonally adjusted Consumer Price Index. Using that measure, gold is historically cheap, Mr. Grandich contends. While more people are choosing gold as an asset, it should only remain a small portion of the portfolio, used for diversification against stocks, bonds and other assets. Q: Gold prices usually appreciate when stocks aren't performing well. What gives? A: With major stock gauges like the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index hovering around four-and-a-half year highs, it's clear that the old adage about gold and stocks moving in opposite directions isn't holding right now. Barry Ritholtz, chief market strategist at the Maxim Group, points out that when the economy slumped in 2001 and 2002 and the S&P 500 tumbled 33%, gold surged nearly 28% as investors looked to offset poorly performing stocks. However, since January 2003, though, each has risen about 42%. That's because tax and interest-rate cuts served to "re-inflate" the economy, Mr. Ritholtz says, creating enough price appreciation to make inflation-wary investors consider gold. Stocks, meanwhile, benefited from the improvement in corporate earnings in the last couple of years. In fact, moderate inflation may allow more companies to raise prices and, thus, boost earnings. Q: So, $500 gold doesn't necessarily herald an inflation problem? A: Because the price of gold generally rises along with prices in the overall economy, the metal traditionally has been used as an inflation hedge. And there are strategists who hold that rising gold prices is indicative of looming inflation problems. A report published in October by Lakewood, Wash.-based researcher McClellan Financial Publications says the government's tally of consumer-price growth tends to trail gold's path by about 14 months. Gold started to rally in 2001 and the Labor Department's consumer-price index began to climb in late 2002. Right now, overall U.S. consumer prices are growing at a 4.3% pace year-over-year, up from a 2.4% rate at the end of 2002 -- back when gold was at $347 an ounce. Many economists think inflation is a problem contained only within the energy sector, but gold enthusiasts are more pessimistic. Q: The dollar is strengthening against the euro and the yen. Traditionally, gold has fallen in value when the dollar has gained strength. Why isn't that happening now? A: The dollar-gold relationship isn't exclusive. Gold reacts to multiple currencies, says Jeffrey Christian, managing director at the CPM Group, a commodities research firm. The yellow metal tends to rise when investors aren't particularly thrilled with any one currency over another. Gold's increase over the past few days has largely been attributed to investors selling the Japanese yen; since April 2004, while the dollar rallied from around 104 yen to about 120 yen, gold gained 16%. "The bottom line is, there is not a great deal of fervor in favor of any single currency at this point," Mr. Christian says. That has made gold more attractive to people who would otherwise invest in currencies, he says. Q: Are high oil prices playing a part? A: For many years, gold prices and oil prices have tracked each other pretty closely, as both on some level represent an expression of (or reaction to) inflation. The relationship between the value of gold and oil futures had generally been about 15-to-1, meaning that gold at $500 would correspond to oil at around $33 a barrel. But it's not the case anymore. Earlier in the year oil was soaring while gold was merely doing pretty well. If the ratio held, with oil at, say, $56 a barrel, gold would have to rise to $840 an ounce. For the oil-gold ratio to get back on track, either gold needs to surge or oil needs to fall much more sharply. (Since oil's peak at the beginning of September, this is exactly what's happened, although the old ratio hasn't been re-established and may not for some time.) Write to David A. Gaffen at david.gaffen AT wsj.com ____________________________________________________________________ T h e O r c h i d L i s t Open Electronic Forum for Jewelry Manufacturing Methods and Procedures ____________________________________________________________________ Orchid FAQ: ~ http://www.ganoksin.com/orchid/faq.htm Orchid Archives: ~ http://www.ganoksin.com/orchid/archive Orchid Galleries: ~ http://www.ganoksin.com/orchid/gallery.htm Invite a Friend: ~ http://www.ganoksin.com/invite.htm ____________________________________________________________________ Tips From The Jeweler's Bench - Article Archive ~ http://www.ganoksin.com/borisat/tip_sear.htm The Jeweler's Selected Bibliography List ~ http://www.ganoksin.com/jewelry-books Buy Orchid Jewelry: ~ http://www.ganoksin.com/shop ____________________________________________________________________ -Unsubscribe: -Email: orchid-request AT ganoksin.com Body=unsubscribe subject=blank ____________________________________________________________________ |
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