Gold Investors Stay Focused
Commodities / Gold and Silver 2011 Jan 31, 2011 - 09:34 AM GMTBy: Frank_Holmes
	
	
Last week was an eventful week at home and abroad with several events  directly showing up in the performance of global markets and the price of gold.  On Friday, Egypt’s  mayhem in the streets caused uncertainty in the markets, but sent gold shooting  up over $21 to close at $1,336.75.
  On Wednesday, a continuation of the Federal Reserve’s easy monetary  policy pushed gold up double-digits. Earlier in the week, a small hedge fund  that had overleveraged itself to gold futures blew out its position, causing  the biggest ever one-day reduction in futures contracts for the Comex.
 
This small hedge fund trader fell victim to one of the oldest flaws in capital markets—arrogance with excessive leverage. This is the same infallible, overleveraged attitude that took down Fannie Mae, Lehman Brothers, Long-Term Capital Management, Enron and a number of Main Street American Home Buyers who leverage themselves 100-to-1.
By overleveraging his small $10 million fund, he was able to control the equivalent of South Africa’s annual gold production, according to the Wall Street Journal. That’s one small fund controlling an amount of gold equal to the world’s third-largest producer?
Leverage of this magnitude is impossible to manage, no matter how intelligent the investor. However, danger and crisis can equal opportunity for long-term investors. All these events have created a lot of short-term noise but not derailed the long-term story.
Life is about managing expectations and that’s why we educate investors to anticipate before they participate (View our Anticipate Before You Participate presentation) by studying the DNA of volatility inherent in different asset classes.
As I mentioned in my blog earlier last week (Frank Talk- Mythbusting Gold’s Volatility), gold is far less volatile than other commodities such as oil, copper and other metals. In fact, gold’s volatility has been less than domestic equities over the past several years.

This table shows the rolling one-month, three-month and 12-month  volatility for gold bullion, the S&P 500 Index and the XAU. You can see  that the average one-month price movements for both the S&P 500 and gold  are roughly equal over the past five years.
  When you go further out on the time horizon, gold’s volatility shrinks  when compared with the S&P 500. For a one-year period, the average  volatility for gold bullion has been 28 percent less than the S&P 500 over  the past five years.
  I’ve included gold stocks in the table because it illustrates the  leverage you get with gold equities versus the bullion. As you can see, the  ratio has roughly been 2-to-1 over the past five years for all three time  periods. This means that if gold goes up 2 percent, then gold equities  typically move up 4 percent, and vice versa on the downside.
  That is close to what we’ve experienced so far this January with gold  prices and the XAU slipping 7.52 percent and 12.26 percent, respectively.
  Long-term gold investors must remember that we have been here before.  Remember that gold is always being driven by the fear trade and the love trade.  During weeks like this, the fear trade gets most of the media coverage,  especially when a country like Egypt  implodes because roughly 30 percent of the world’s oil travels through the Suez Canal, according to Dahlman Rose. The story is much  bigger and more complex.
The fear trade drivers are negative real interest rates and deficit  spending to support social welfare programs. This chart from Clusterstock shows  how the U.S debt ceiling has risen to unprecedented levels. Since the  mid-1980s, the U.S.  has raised its debt ceiling hand-in-hand with the country’s economic growth,  even faster in some cases.

Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve reaffirmed last week that real interest  rates will remain negative for the long haul. The Congressional Budget Office  (CBO) has set the deficit estimate for 2011 at $1.5 trillion. The only thing  keeping gold prices from skyrocketing has been money supply, which has been  slow to rise. However, money supply in emerging economies is well above the G7  levels.
  Governments in the developed world, not just the U.S., have a  long-term spending problem. Will they address their fiscal deficit spending on  social welfare by making serious cuts or will they try to reflate their  economies, devalue their currencies to stimulate exports or raise taxes to an  extent they choke economic activity? Whichever way, it should be a positive for  gold. Bottom line, it is prudent to have some exposure to gold in a diversified  portfolio.
  As I have said in the past, the other side is the love trade, gold  jewelry demand in emerging economies is rising and remains the biggest  component of the demand equation. India’s  gold imports were up roughly 46 percent in 2010 and China’s nearly 500 percent. Overall  global jewelry demand was up 10 percent in 2010, according to the World Gold  Council.
  As long as both the love trade and the fear trade are intact, gold will  remain attractive.
  The correction in gold appears to be over for the reasons cited above.  We’re near the 200-day moving average which is a key psychological support  level.
On Friday, Richard O’Brien, the CEO of Newmont Mining, said he expects  gold to reach $1,400-$1,500 per ounce in 2011. The head of the world’s  second-largest gold producer also added that he could see gold hitting $2,000  in the future because of rising demand from emerging markets and a hedge  against inflation.
Please consider carefully the fund's investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. For this and other important information, obtain a fund prospectus by visiting www.usfunds.com or by calling 1-800-US-FUNDS (1-800-873-8637). Read it carefully before investing. Distributed by U.S. Global Brokerage, Inc.
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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