4 Sensational Facts About Gold Investing That You Might Not Know
by Frank Holmes
321
Gold
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Our ever-popular
Periodic
Table of Commodity Returns has been updated through 2012. Investor
Alert readers love this chart as it shows a decade of results across
14 different commodities, providing strikingly rich information
in a very familiar format.
Last year,
11 commodities rose in value, with wheat rising as the top crop
after seeing a significant decline in 2011. It was a similar rags-to-riches
story for the next few leaders, including lead, zinc, natural gas
and platinum, which all climbed double digits in 2012 after falling
in 2011.
Only three
commodities declined over the year: Crude oil fell by 7 percent
after rising 8 percent the previous year. Nickel declined for the
second year in a row. In 2012, the metal lost 9 percent and in 2011,
nickel fell another 24 percent.
Coal was the
worst-performing commodity in 2012, falling nearly 17 percent. Coal’s
been going through a rough spell lately; in fact, the commodity
has not been king for five years (although it did record a 31 percent
increase in 2010). As Global Resources Fund Portfolio Manager Evan
Smith explained to listeners during our recent presentation,
for the first time ever in the U.S., natural gas provided more electricity
and power than coal did.
As you can
see from the table, commodities often have wide price fluctuations
from year to year given the many factors affecting supply and demand,
such as government policies, union strikes, and currency volatility.
That’s why when it comes to commodities and commodity producers,
many investors “leave the driving” to active money managers
who understand these specialized assets and the global trends affecting
them.
Take gold and
gold companies, for example. After investing in the mining industry
for decades, we’ve taken note of several facts about gold
that continue to surprise our investors.
Here are four
of the latest:
1. Gold
Has Been A Consistent Performer Over The Decade
While the precious
metal did not shoot the lights out in 2012, gold’s bull rally
goes on. It ended the year up 7 percent, making it a phenomenal
12th year in a row that gold rose in value. In a special gold bar
version of the Periodic Table below, you can easily see gold’s
rotation among the commodities from year to year.
What’s
fascinating is the three-year rising pattern relative to other commodities
that emerges when you focus on the bars. Over the past 10 years,
gold has risen in position compared with the others for three years
in a row, then fallen in relative position in the fourth year before
repeating the cycle. Will it follow the same pattern and be in the
top half of the Periodic Table in 2013?

2. Gold
Should Remain A Hot Commodity In 2013
Considering
the global easing cycle and the continuous running of monetary printing
presses, I believe the Fear Trade will continue to be a driver of
gold over the next several months. Take a look at the projected
rise in the balance sheets as a percent of GDP from the European
Central Bank, the Bank of Japan, the Federal Reserve and the Bank
of England over 2013. The ECB is estimated to have a balance sheet
that is nearly 50 percent of its GDP by the end of the year. The
Bank of Japan is right behind the ECB, with its balance sheet projected
to be nearly 35 percent of GDP. As Mike Shedlock of Mish’s
Global Economic Trend Analysis said, “The race is on to see
which central bank can load up its balance sheet with the most garbage
the fastest.”

My friend Ian
McAvity also summed it up well in his Deliberations on World Markets:
“Gauging from the panicky actions of the major central banks,
I would still prefer to own gold than their paper.” With the
monetary printing presses warm and real interest rates in the red,
gold will likely glimmer for another year.
Read
the rest of the article
January
25, 2013
Frank Holmes is chief
executive officer and chief investment officer of U.S. Global Investors
Inc. The company is a registered investment adviser that manages
approximately $4.8 billion in 13 no-load mutual funds and for other
advisory clients. A Toronto native, he bought a controlling interest
in U.S. Global Investors in 1989, after an accomplished career in
Canada’s capital markets. His specialized knowledge gives him expertise
in resource-based industries and money management.
Copyright
© 2013 321
Gold
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