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Merryn Somerset Webb: Give me gold sovereigns over paper currency

By Merryn Somerset Webb

Published: September 18 2009 18:52 | Last updated: September 18 2009 18:52

Last week, I wrote here about the
bull market in gold
. I don’t think it is over. Obviously, not everyone agrees.

A commodity financier friend e-mailed me to
scoff. He said that, for years now, gold bugs
have been dreaming of global financial disaster driving the gold price to $3,000. But they have just had “their perfect storm” and it didn’t happen. He reckons we should give it up.

I’m not sure he is right. Sure, the financial system has had a pretty good meltdown without gold getting much above $1,000 an ounce for long, but it isn’t a banking collapse that really gets gold bugs going, it is a currency collapse. And, in the currency markets, one could argue, the “perfect storm” is just getting going.

As all governments rush to beat each other to the printing presses to stimulate their languishing economies and the contracting supply of credit, there is, says Sean Corrigan of Diapason Commodities Management, “a deliberate and rapid inflation of the narrow money supply everywhere you look”.

That’s something that is going to continue – with the inevitable result that, sooner or later, we will see a rerun of the stagflationary 1970s. This is not just a bull market in gold but a “bear market for paper currencies.”

Clearly, the gold price is going to be volatile. It looks like much of this week’s move back up to $1,020 can be partly attributed to Barrick Gold looking to buy large quantities of the metal to close out hedges, for example.

But if you think of gold as a currency rather than as a metal (which, by the way, most central banks do – why else would they be buying it now?), the medium-term trend has to be up.

The latter view appears to be the one held by most FT Money readers: the majority of the e-mails I got after last week’s column asked not “if” but “how” to buy gold. So how should you?

Purists will want to
buy physical gold – bars and coins – from dealers such as Baird and then keep them either at
home or in a safety deposit box.

I have great sympathy with this strategy and
am personally pretty tempted by British gold sovereigns (which weigh
a quarter of an ounce and were the original UK
pound coin).

When I was filming a bit on gold for the BBC early this year, the dealer I was interviewing allowed me to pick up great handfuls of them and run them through my fingers. Very satisfying.

I didn’t take any home at the time but, given that most sovereigns are considered to be legal currency and therefore
not subject to capital gains tax, when I buy more physical gold, I’ll buy sovereigns.

Another option if you want to own physical
gold but can’t be doing with taking care of it yourself, is to buy it via
an online trading company such as Bullion Vault.
You buy an actual allocated amount of gold – Bullion Vault holds its gold in 400-ounce bars but you can buy in units of just one gramme.

You’ll also get a pretty good price as, this way, you don’t have to pay the kind of premiums that come with coins and small bars.

Simpler still is to buy via an exchange traded fund (ETF), perhaps the ETF Securities Physical Gold Fund, which tracks the price of gold and can be chucked into your individual savings account (Isa), making it as tax free as your sovereigns will be. I also hold the ETF Securities Physical PPSG (Palladium, Platinum, Silver and Gold) Basket in my self-invested personal pension (Sipp) – silver has monetary characteristics, too.

Finally, there are the gold stocks. This is a much trickier business. Technically, goldminers should offer far greater returns than gold itself. Their fixed costs are high but their variable costs are low – so, once the fixed costs are covered, every rise in the gold price should be pretty much pure profit.

But that didn’t happen in 2008. Back then, even as the gold price rose, gold stocks – caught up in the global scramble for liquidity – fell with the rest of the market. And even now, with gold near all-time highs, the goldminers are well below their highs.

On the plus side, that means many of them look like they offer pretty good value with gold at $1,000 (a good number make profits with gold at $300-$400) and excellent value for those who think gold will be going higher.

Sector Investments has just launched a Junior Mining Fund which is to be 70 per cent invested in the shares of small and medium-sized gold companies and could be of interest.

But those after a more blue-chip gold investment should turn to the Merrill Lynch’s Gold & General Fund. I’ve held this in my Isa for more than eight years and, while it has had its ups and downs, it remains one of my best investments ever.

The only word of warning on it? It comes with nasty upfront and annual fees, so make sure you buy it through a fund supermarket and get the charges discounted.

Merryn Somerset Webb is editor of Money Week and previously worked as a stockbroker. The views expressed are personal. merryn@ft.com

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