Seesawing since May, Gold Still is a Portfolio Diversifier, Hedger and Wealth Preserver
Since mid-May, the U.S. Comex gold futures prices have seesawed,
climbing up one week, and declining the next. After the initial gold
price surge of 4.6% from 28 June to 3 July, gold futures have dropped
$42 to $1,579.8 as of Tuesday. Since 3 July, the broader risky markets
also had not performed well: the S&P and the Stoxx 50 fell 2.4% and
3.4% respectively, the Euro/Dollar dropped 2.8%, and the CRB Commodity
Index declined 1.4%. In contrast, the Dollar Index surged almost 2%,
while the U.S. 10-year Treasury Bond rallied about 13bp.
In June, the U.S. added 80,000 nonfarm payrolls, below the market
expectation of 100,000, although unemployment rate remained unchanged at
8.2%. China cut interest rates two times in one month, as moderating
inflation, slowing imports, and rising trade surpluses are pointing
towards an accelerating rate of slowdown. China’s Premier Wen mentioned
that investment growth would need to be supported in China, prompting
market expectations of further policy stimulus. The ECB governor may
also be prepared to lower interest rates again after cutting rates last
week. The Euro/Dollar fell to a two-year low to 1.2250 on Tuesday, as
the upcoming European bailout fund will meet delays, even though the 30
billion Euros rescue funds are expected to flow directly to the Spanish
banks in July. The macroeconomic uncertainties have prompted investors
to demand dollar, preventing gold prices to go higher.
On 10 July, the World Gold Council (WGC) pared down its earlier estimate
of 2012 Chinese gold demand from 1,000 tons to 870 tons, citing a
firmer dollar and the stall in gold price rally have lowered consumers’
desires to buy gold. Thomson Reuters GFMs Ltd. expects Chinese demand
to top 900 tons in 2012, a yearly rise of 16%. Still China’s gold
demand continues to be strong, as shown by the May gold imports from
Hong Kong into China, which rose 6 times over a year ago to 75.6 metric
tons.
In the latest WGC’s research titled “Gold as a strategic asset for UK
investors”, a small gold allocation ranging from 2.6% to 9.5% was shown
to increase portfolio performance on a long-term basis, as well as
reduce losses during the worst market periods related to the 2008 to
2009 financial crisis and the latest European credit crises, thus
supporting gold’s role as a portfolio diversifier, hedger, and wealth
preserver.
Robert Jilles
Sharps Pixley, London
www.sharpspixley.com