gold investment, silver investment

arkadiusz-sieron

WGC’s June Gold Investor: King about Gold

June 10, 2016, 8:05 AM Arkadiusz Sieroń , PhD

On Tuesday, the World Gold Council (WGC) released a new edition of Gold Investor, its publication on gold demand trends. What can we learn from the report?

Gold Investor is back after a long pause, with a new layout. The latest issue contains a few interesting articles about gold in context of: Brexit, pension funds, the Shanghai benchmark or negative interest rates. It also includes a cover story about the former Governor of the Bank of England Mervyn King’s economic views presented in his latest book The End of Alchemy: Money, Banking and the Future of the Global Economy.

Let’s start with the publication entitled “Misguided policies and economic risk”. We will cover the rest of the articles next week. King believes that monetary policy has reached its limits:

“If you repeatedly bring down interest rates to try and persuade people to spend today rather than tomorrow, it works for a while. But they become increasingly resistant to being asked to spend their resources now rather than save for the future. And the longer domestic spending is in excess of potential output, the more you have to borrow from the rest of the world to finance it. Eventually people wake up to the fact that this is unsustainable and then you get a sharp adjustment downwards.”

In other words, the monetary policy can only buy some time for politicians to conduct some structural reforms. Unfortunately, they have not undertaken the necessary steps for eight years – and this is why economic growth has slowed down. The longer we wait, the worse it can be.

“The risk is that we just muddle through with a prolonged period of very low growth. The longer that goes on, the more output we will have lost in the interim. And in the long run, it makes another crisis more likely because, if everyone is relying on monetary policy and it isn’t the answer, we won’t get back to a new equilibrium.”

King describes the current state of the global economy as “radical uncertainty”. This is why he suggests adopting a pragmatic approach to investment and including assets that are negatively correlated or uncorrelated in an investors’ portfolio. It goes without saying gold may be a smart choice, as the shiny metal shows a low or even statistically insignificant correlation to other major asset classes.

“I am very struck by the fact that over many many years, central banks, governments and individuals have always, despite the protestations of economists, held some gold in their portfolio. Obviously, there is no high running return, but when unexpected things happen, particularly when governments rise and fall, then gold is a means of payment that everyone is always prepared to accept. And I think that’s why even central banks have always had a role in their portfolios for gold.”

The take-home message is that the WGC released a new issue of Gold Investor. The cover story describes the views of Marvyn King, the former Governor of Bank of England. He believes that monetary policy has reached its limits. If he is right as he seems to be, it is good news for gold, as sluggish economic growth will continue due to ineffective monetary policies and lack of political reforms. In an environment of weak growth and reduced faith in central banks, the yellow metal should shine.

If you enjoyed the above analysis, we invite you to check out our other services. We focus on fundamental analysis in our monthly Market Overview reports and we provide daily Gold & Silver Trading Alerts with clear buy and sell signals. If you’re not ready to subscribe yet and are not on our mailing list yet, we urge you to join our gold newsletter today. It’s free and if you don’t like it, you can easily unsubscribe.

Disclaimer: Please note that the aim of the above analysis is to discuss the likely long-term impact of the featured phenomenon on the price of gold and this analysis does not indicate (nor does it aim to do so) whether gold is likely to move higher or lower in the short- or medium term. In order to determine the latter, many additional factors need to be considered (i.e. sentiment, chart patterns, cycles, indicators, ratios, self-similar patterns and more) and we are taking them into account (and discussing the short- and medium-term outlook) in our trading alerts.

Thank you.

Arkadiusz Sieron
Sunshine Profits‘ Gold News Monitor and Market Overview Editor

Gold News Monitor
Gold Trading Alerts
Gold Market Overview

Did you enjoy the article? Share it with the others!

Gold Alerts

More

Dear Sunshine Profits,

gold and silver investors
menu subelement hover background