Friday , 19 April 2024

When Should You Sell Your Gold?

 

The question most often asked of gold bulls is, “At what price will you take your profits?” It is a question that betrays a lack of understanding about why anyone should [want to] own gold [in the first place]. Nevertheless, the simple answer must be, “When paper money stops losing its value”. This response should alert anyone who asks this question to the idea that owning fiat cash is the speculative position, not ownership of precious metals. [Let me explain.] Words: 1184 
So says Alasdair Macleod (www.FinanceAndEconomics.org) in edited excerpts from his original article*.
   

Lorimer Wilson, editor of www.FinancialArticleSummariesToday.com (A site for sore eyes and inquisitive minds) and www.munKNEE.com (Your Key to Making Money!) has edited ([ ]), abridged (…) and reformatted (some sub-titles and bold/italics emphases) the article below for the sake of clarity and brevity to ensure a fast and easy read. The article’s views and conclusions are unaltered and no personal comments have been included to maintain the integrity of the original article. Please note that this paragraph must be included in any article re-posting to avoid copyright infringement.

 Macleod goes on to say, in part:

 

 
  Instead of gold, people commonly think of paper money as the only medium of exchange and as a store of value; cash is, after all, their unit of account. They see the gold price rising when they should be seeing the value of paper money falling. Because cash is everyone’s unit of account it is wrongly seen as the ultimate risk-free asset. This is also the fund manager’s approach to investment: his investment returns are calculated in paper money, so he cannot account for a superior class of asset. He is also taught to spread investment risk across a range of inferior asset classes to enhance returns. Therefore the investment manager wrongly assumes that precious metals is one of those inferior asset classes. All modern investment management works on these assumptions.Why Managed Portfolios Have Little, if Any, Exposure to Precious Metals

[The above] helps explains why managed portfolios today have very little exposure to precious metals, but there are other reasons.

  • Investment funds in total have grown rapidly since the 1970s on the back of money and credit creation. This monetary expansion has fuelled both new funds for investment as well as asset prices generally, while gold and related investments became unfashionable in gold’s twenty year bear market between 1980 and 2000. The combination of these two factors reduced precious metals exposure in managed portfolios to very low levels. Gold was therefore ignored as an asset class when modern portfolio theory evolved in the 1990s, and is simply not considered by the current generation of fund managers.
  • Consequently, investment funds of all types invest in bond markets, stock markets, property assets, securitisations, foreign currencies and to a minor extent general commodities. From time to time they may have had temporary and speculative exposure to precious metals, but very few fund managers actually understand that gold is the ultimate hedge against cash losing its value. After all, if you account in paper money, paper money has to be the risk-free position. The understanding that cash is not risk free is left to private individuals not misinformed by modern portfolio practice.

Why the Quantity of Paper Money Will Continue to Grow

The world-wide accumulation of hoarded wealth in the form of gold and silver ingots, coins and jewellery has been growing at an accelerating rate over the last thirty years. This has compromised the central banks who were actively suppressing the price: the result is that large amounts of gold and silver have passed from governments to private individuals. None of this can be properly captured in the statistics, partly because the central banks involved refuse to provide accurate information about their sales, swaps and leases, and partly because the individuals that hoard precious metals do so secretly, and are therefore beyond the scope of meaningful statistics.

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The reason individuals hoard precious metals is the basic hypothesis of this article: they will dishoard gold when paper money stops losing its value…The quantity of paper money will continue to grow as the world wrestles with its problems. As every day passes, one’s worst fears of yesterday materialise. Governments, driven by social pressures rather than dispassionate economics, are forced into ever-increasing financial rescues; but by far the biggest problem facing them is the seeming inevitability of a full-scale banking collapse…This obviously cannot be allowed to happen so what can the politicians and central banks do?…They cannot fund a rescue with taxes, and they are already borrowing as much as the bond markets can stand. There is only one option left…[and that is to] shore up the system by printing as much money as it takes. Printing money is simply the way governments buy time…

Why the Interest in Precious Metals Will Contnue to Rise

The rising interest in precious metals is entirely consistent with the growing likelihood that the printing of fiat currencies will continue to accelerate in order to buy off default. While the translation of monetary inflation into price inflation is rarely an even result, we know from both economics and the experience of history that the two are linked as cause and effect respectively so we can conclude that paper money will continue to lose its value for the foreseeable future.

Accelerating price inflation, [however,] does not just affect cash as an asset class. [It also affects:]

  • bonds which are commonly the largest component of a conventional portfolio [and which] will lose value faster than cash,
  • equities [which] will be lucky to keep up with cash values while bond yields rise and the adverse effects of accelerating inflation result in recession,
  • property [which] will be hit by rising bond yields and rent increases that can only lag inflation.
  • Furthermore, equities and property are commonly used as collateral against the very high levels of borrowings in the private sector, which ties their prices to interest rates, and therefore to cash.

Only commodities, which are a minor asset class for portfolios, can be reasonably expected to outperform cash. In addition, history confirms that gold and silver are easily the best performers in times of rising inflation.

[As such,] those unfortunates who have delegated the management of their investments to professional fund managers have only bought for themselves the illusion of financial security. They are almost entirely exposed to cash and assets that are dependant on cash itself, because they own negligible amounts of gold and related investments.

Conclusion

[The above] means that, systemically, portfolios have become totally dependent on the stability of fiat currencies [which] makes gold and silver, not cash, the ultimate risk-free investment class. Paper money may be the medium of exchange and the unit of account, but in these increasingly uncertain times gold and silver are the safest stores of value and will continue to be hoarded, irrespective of price, for as long as these uncertain times continue.

[Next time soneone] asks you when you might take your profits in gold and silver, smile sweetly and just say, “When paper money stops losing its value”.

*http://www.financeandeconomics.org/Articles%20archive/2010.11.22%20gold%20and%20cash.htm

 

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