Active Investing: Opportunity in Gold

As active managers, we embrace both a top down and bottom up investment philosophy as we look for opportunities for investment. One such potential opportunity we are seeing from more of a top down, thematic approach is in gold. Before anyone thinks I have lost it, I am simply talking about bonds in some of the lower cost miners. Always remember the advantage of being a debt investor: you aren’t looking for or in need of a quick trade or turnaround. What you are looking for are survivors. We only need our companies to keep the lights on at the bottom of the cycle. Those companies that do this often capture huge rewards. Darwin was a questionable biologist, but should have won the Nobel Prize in economics. Darwinian economics (“survival of the fittest”) often plays out in down cycles. Those that make it through can end up with pricing power and increased market share, and thrive in the long-term. Think of auto suppliers who survived the terrible period from 2005-2009. They have been making a great deal of hay in the last five years.

I am not a gold bug in any way and am not looking for some type of inflation protection. What I am interested in is gold’s potential reaction to the ultimate reality that global Central Bankers, in my opinion, are in fact nothing more than government bureaucrats. The insanity of thinking that they can control economic outcomes or steer the globe is utter insanity. At what point will people begin to lose faith in the whole process? I have often mumbled to myself that gold makes no sense and has no fundamental or industrial value. And fiat (paper) currency does? Throughout the history of man, gold was a store of value and medium of exchange. It wasn’t until Nixon ended Bretton Woods for good in 1971 that the world did not link some portion of their money supply to gold. China, Russia, India, Korea and Japan combined hold around two-thirds of all foreign exchange reserves (total US dollar foreign exchange reserves are estimated to be around $12 trillion by the IMF1). As the following article indicates, it seems like Russia and China are not exactly enamored with the option of holding their reserves in the US dollar, and Germany and France are already way ahead of them:2

Attending the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in May, Putin stressed to reporters that it is important to deposit gold and currency reserves in a rational and secure way. Many market observers expect Russia to increase its gold holdings over the next few years, as the ratio of gold in its foreign reserves is still smaller than those of France and Germany, whose gold holdings are around 60% of total foreign reserves….China, which has been critical of the sanctions against Russia and has strengthened economic ties with the country, has also been increasing its gold holdings in recent years. Some market watchers predict that if China and Russia, which have adopted a confrontational approach to Western countries, further increase their gold holdings, the dollar’s status as a key currency could be shaken.

Nikkei Asian Review, http://asia.nikkei.com

Since a large percentage of the remaining reserves are held by countries considered the developing world it seems to me that these cultures may be much more comfortable with gold over paper. Given the soaring dollar, the collapsing euro and China’s failure to make the yuan a reserve currency, perhaps we all will.