Test link
 
Register
News
iPad app
Events
CPD Program
Subscriptions
Little Black Book
Journals
Jobs
Contact Us
 
 
 
 
 
NEWS > ECONOMICS
Yamashita's treasure
Wednesday, 25 November 2009 10:00am
By Benjamin Ong  |  In Economics

US$1,170.30 per troy ounce. This is how much gold - the commodity, the physical metal - is currently fetching in international markets. Chances are it would go higher and it is now creating problems.

Back in March this year -- when the equity markets were just beginning to take flight - I penned a piece on this space titled ‘Go for Gold' (www.financialstandard.com.au/news/view/25322/) concluding that the global financial crisis and the measures implemented to end it have made gold the perfect hedge. "Up when the economy is fixed. Up when the economy is not fixed. Is there a better hedge?"

On that morning, the yellow metal was priced at US$953.7 a troy ounce. This translates into a 22.7 per cent profit to buyers as at last night. Those who bought bullions, bars and coins exactly a year ago are doing even better - the value of their holdings are now up 44.4 per cent.

The problem is where to stash all this gold. This becomes more so during this period when investors and speculators are taking delivery of the physical metal itself. Futures, forward or options contracts, or Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) or stock certificates are easy to fold and store under the bed, in a cookie jar or in a safety deposit box. But how do you store tonnes of gold?

You pay a warehouse or a vault to store and guard them. Ahh…yes! That's it! But wait. With so many wanting to hold gold bullions, bars, ingots and coins, warehouses and vaults are overloaded and running out of space.

The Wall Street Journal reports that HSBC - owner of one of the biggest vaults in the US - are sending retail investors away to make room for its institutional clients.

Gold Silver Vault - a depository in Idaho - had taken in some of HSBC's clients and this reportedly has contributed to a 500 per cent increase in new metal stored in its vault in the third quarter alone.

You want more? Reports also show that 1,000 new accounts are opened every month at Goldstar for the purchase of gold coins. In 2006 only around 100 new accounts were opened each month.

Anxiety over the value of the US dollar, future inflation and the US government debt suggest that demand for gold would continue to increase in the coming months. This would send prices even higher but at the same time increase the storage problem.

The natural consequence would be higher storage fees. Demand and supply, remember?

Gold has come a long way from being an unloved asset. In the late 1990s, world central banks were even asked - nay, begged - to stop unloading their gold holdings to prevent the price from collapsing. Central banks at the time deemed gold a non-appreciating, non-interest bearing asset. A decade later and everyone can't seem to have enough of the stuff.

Central banks may now revive the hunt for Yamashita's treasure?

News Search   
 
Video Brought to you by
 
Industry
Events
FEB
04
FEB
06NSW Women In Super Networking Series
07Superfund Reform Summit 2012
15SPAA SMSF National Conference
15FSC Leadership Series 2012
21Finsia's Covered Bonds Seminar – NSW
 
Latest
Jobs
 
News
Bites
 
Get it
Daily
FREE to your inbox, get the Financial Standard Daily Email.
 
Get the Free
iPad app
Download the Financial Standard iPad app for FREE

$245 (inc GST) for 1 year
 
FS Advice: The Australian Journal of Financial Planning FS Super: The Journal of Superannuation Management
 
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy
Events Calendar
 
Search Jobs
Recruiter Login
CPD Login
Register
 
Managed Funds
- Australian
- Global
Superannuation Funds
- Specialist
- Diversified
Guide To Series
Product Launches
Showcases
 
Home
Showtime
Learning & Development
Conferences
Industry Profiles
Market Update
Platform Report
Hedge Funds
Mandate Chaser
Roundup
Advantage
Benchmarking
 
Financial Planning
Investment Strategy
Superannuation Management
Financial Services Technology
Copyright © 1992-2012 Rainmaker Group
All material on this site is subject to copyright. All rights reserved. No part of this material may be reproduced, translated, transmitted, framed or stored in a retrieval system for public or private use without the written permission of the publisher.