Moneyization:
The global financial phenomenon of individuals and businesses
moving their funds to monies in which they have the highest
confidence, or money which has a higher store of faith.
The longer term
motivation for today's article is the Gold Super Cycle that will
carry to $1,400. Both Gold and Silver have put in place important
bottoms and are now building formations that will carry both
higher. Investors need to keep those two factors in mind when
considering any single day's action. When the hedge funds pushed
Gold above equilibrium a few months ago all were excited, but the
action was not real. That same lack of reality will arrive too in
the paper asset markets, and many will again feel relieved to be
in Gold and not paper.
On a more
immediate basis was a recent article on the investment mix of
401-k plans, the defined contribution retirement plans used in the
U.S. With the ongoing demise of pension plans in the U.S., these
plans are intended to provide the retirement income of the coming
generation of baby boomer retirees. But, will that happen? The
failure to diversify the retirement system of millions of workers
has put their retirement hopes at great risk. Readers
involved in such plans are encouraged to email this article to
other plan participants and the human resource department with the
hope of rectifying this common investment error.
The foundation
for retirement in the U.S. has two components, the 401-k plan at
work and the equity in the worker's home. Unfortunately, the
retirement plan components, 401-k's for example, are
overwhelmingly invested in paper assets. Plan sponsors have in
near universal fashion failed to adequately diversify the
offerings for employee retirement plans. Offering
"twelve" mutual funds invested in paper assets is not
diversification. It is still all invested in paper assets, one and
only one asset class.
In the first
graph is plotted the asset distribution as determined by the
analysis of Holden & VanDerhel(2006) for 2004 as gathered by
the Employee Benefit Research Institute and the Investment Company
Institute. This analysis, according to the authors, covers
approximately one third of the workers in 401-k plans. Included in
this analysis are about 16 million participants and US$926 billion
of assets.
As is apparent
from the chart, about 97% of these retirement assets are
explicitly invested in paper assets. The classification
"Other" is the only category in which real assets, such
as Gold and Silver, could appear. That category amounts to about
3% of total assets. An explicit estimate of exposure to real
assets is not available. Since that investment would fall within
"Other" in this classification system, we can reasonably
assume that real assets represent an insignificant portion of the
retirement assets of those participating in U.S. defined
contribution plans.
Private
retirement plans in the U.S. are clearly not adequately
diversified. This situation is not unique as he world's retirement
plans are mired in paper assets. The U.S. Social Security System
is entirely invested in U.S. government bonds. In the UK, moving
plan investments to bonds has been a popular choice there. How
much of your retirement is invested in paper assets versus real
assets? Are you well diversified?
Why have
retirement plans, particularly in the U.S., failed to diversify?
Reasons exist, but none of them excuse this situation. The
principal reasons retirement plans failed to have Gold included
are tradition, convenience and ignorance. Using mutual funds, or
other means of investing in paper assets, is easy and generally
accomplishes the goal of establishing the retirement plan. From
the early days of profit-sharing plans, the use of commingled
investment vehicles was adopted for ease of use. This starting
point established a tradition of using paper assets in such plans,
and generally ignored the need to adequately diversify plan
assets.
Most
disheartening is that despite the growing body of evidence that
Gold, and other precious metals, should be included in a
portfolio, corporate plan sponsors ignore the important
diversifying effect of these assets. Often either of two factors
are influencing this situation. First, and most bothersome, is
that many consultants to retirement plans either are not familiar
with the benefits of Gold or choose to ignore it as it does not
add to the financial well being of the consulting firm. In short,
Gold pays no fees or commissions to consultants. Second, many
plans simply have fallen into the clutches of mutual fund
companies in order to save money, and the mutual fund company does
not provide a full range of diversifying funds.
Diversification
is the use of assets that do not move together to enhance the
return on a portfolio. The second graph portrays return indices
for Gold and U.S. paper equities for the past ten years. While
they have generally moved in the same direction recently, the
overall pattern shows divergence in the performance of these
assets. Informed plan sponsors and consultants certainly can not
be unaware of the picture shown in the graph. Perhaps it is being
intentionally ignored. By the way, how will these plan sponsors
and consultants react when the positions in that graph are
reversed? 2000-2002 will be repeated in the paper equity markets.
Perhaps
diversification and the role of correlation in achieving effective
diversification are indeed beyond the grasp of some consultants to
employee benefit plans. Certainly that can not be the case around
the globe. The third graph is a rather simple concept that should
be understood by almost anyone supervising employee retirement
plans. In that graph are shown annualized returns on Gold and
paper equities for 10 years, five years and the past year. A
reasonable assumption would be that employees want good returns on
their retirement funds. But yet, such results are apparently being
ignored by many plan sponsors. By the way again, wonder why we
never see a chart like this on CNBC.
Perhaps the
ready evidence in these charts is too simple for consultants and
plan sponsors. Maybe they want more heady academic type studies.
If that is the case, they are available. For example, Ibbotson
Associates produced a study in 2005 titled "Portfolio
Diversification with Gold, Silver and Platinum" for Bullion
Market Services, www.bmsinc.ca. They concluded:
"Investors
can potentially improve th reward-to-risk ratio in conservative,
moderate, and aggressive [risk orientations] asset allocations by
including precious metals with allocations of 7.1%, 12.5%, and
15.7%, respectively. These results suggest that including precious
metals in an asset allocation could increase expected returns and
reduce portfolio risk"(Ibbotson,3).
Further,
Hillier et al concluded that precious metals, Gold, Silver and
platinum, in "Do Precious Metals Shine: An Investment
Perspective" in the March/April 2006 issue of Financial
Analysts Journal improved the performance of portfolios. They
wrote:
"Through
analyzing daily data for the 1976-2004 period, we showed the
following: Gold, platinum, and silver have the potential to play a
diversifying role in broad-based investment portfolios. . . .
Financial portfolios containing a moderate weighting of gold
perform better than portfolios consisting only of financial
assets. . . . Furthermore, our results suggest that over the past
25 years, the optimal weight of gold in broad-based international
equity portfolios was approximately 9.5 percent, significantly
higher than is currently seen in most funds' equity portfolios
today" Hillier et al,104-105).
The readily
observable evidence and the academic studies all suggest that Gold
should be included in retirement plans. That void in the asset
distribution in the retirement funds of the baby boomers leaves
them at great risk. The experts on paper assets continue to
contend that all is well, just as they did in 1999-2000. Their
last great paper asset recommendation was the NASDAQ at 5000, and
that market is still down 50%. The same is likely to happen to
paper asset portfolios of this group of soon to be retirees.
Should the Dow Jones Industrial Average match the performance of
the NASDAQ, which is increasingly likely, the retirement assets of
the baby boomers could collapse by 25-40%. How will they pay their
bills, buy groceries and drugs, and eat in retirement with those
kinds of results? Failure to diversify carries great financial
risk.
This
situation is both a failure and an opportunity! Retirement
plans, just as we observed with central banks, own too much paper
assets. The exposure of retirement plans to Gold is at a minimum.
At current levels, approaching none, the exposure can only go
higher as enlightenment spreads to these victims of the paper
asset crowd. Many will learn that owning Gold outside their
retirement plan may be the only way to protect their retirements.
Here, like elsewhere unfortunately, Gold ownership continues to be
too low. More likely global Gold ownership by individuals is
likely to rise as the coming paper asset financial disaster moves
closer. Gold's price is
likely to benefit from the absurdly low rate of exposure to Gold
that is the current situation.
Paper
assets markets are slowly moving into an era of great
vulnerability. In the late 1960s the baby boomers began
to enter the work force. When they did contributions to retirement
plans, including the Social Security system, began to grow.
Retirement plans experienced net cash inflows which were
subsequently invested in paper assets. Contributions into the
plans were greater than the benefits being paid out. That net cash
inflow has been the norm for more than forty years. Now, the front
edge of the baby boomers is approaching 60. Retirement plans are
soon to become net sellers of plan assets to finance the
retirement of the paper boomers. Paper
assets markets are soon to face a 10-15 year period when
retirement plans, around the world, are net sellers of paper
assets. That long-term deluge of selling will push
paper asset prices to lows none expect.
Many may plan,
or hope, to use the equity in their homes for retirement. This
past week the report on existing home sales in the U.S. indicates
the housing price bubble has burst! Housing prices have
started a slide that will likely persist for up to ten years.
A far greater concern is to whom the baby boomers will sell their
homes. The baby boomers will be selling more houses than buyers
will exist to buy them. How many of your neighbors are baby
boomers that are likely to want to sell their big houses in the
next 5-10 years? The bottom
on housing prices as the baby boomers move into retirement will be
far below any expectations.
Of the major
assets classes, paper assets and housing are over owned by
investors around the world. The under owned asset class is
precious metals, Gold and Silver. As paper asset markets begin to
be pummeled by net selling by retirement plans, Gold and Silver
will be the safe havens. As central banks begin to sell their
bloated holdings in bonds, bond prices will fall and yields,
interest rates, will move dramatically higher. The selling plans
of baby boomer home owners will be dashed. The world will then be
a net seller of U.S. dollars at the same time. Gold
and Silver may be the only investment alternatives with any
reasonable hope of being viable.
Clearly, the
first step for most investors is to begin building a portfolio of
Gold. Investing in Gold is too easy today. Be it in physical form
or electronic form, ETFs, Gold belongs in an investor's portfolio.
The decision to add Gold is not one that requires great
consideration or reflection. Only two issues need be decided. How
much Gold should be bought? When should Gold be bought, in a
tactical sense? The simple table that follows can provide an easy
way to determine the answer to the first question.
|
How
Much Gold To Buy |
|
Value of
retirement plan |
|
plus
value of your paper asset investments |
|
plus
reasonable estimate of home equity |
|
minus
Gold & Silver currently owned |
|
Equals
amount of Gold to buy |
After
determining how much Gold need be purchased, the remaining
decision is when to buy. Fortunately for today's investors the
heightened volatility created by hedge funds and global events
repeatedly creates buying opportunities. These opportunities exist
when prices have been pushed lower by irrational selling forces.
With $Gold about to explode through $600 in a violent breakout,
buyers should not be hesitating.
$Gold has been
putting in place a lateral pattern as part of the completion of an
A-B-C pattern. With the U.S. dollar again becoming the target of
sellers, $Gold is likely to move dramatically upward. The abnormal
pattern created by hedge fund trading that pushed $Gold to more
that $700 will soon fade from memory. Gold investors will be
looking to the future and higher prices. Dwelling on yesterday is
interesting, but investors should be looking to the future and the
potential for $Gold to rise to near $1,400. You do not drive a
portfolio by looking in the rearview mirror.
CN$Gold is
exhibiting a similar pattern, as shown in the last chart. With the
Canadian dollar returning to a bear market against the other
global monies, adding to Gold holdings would be wise. Canadian
based investors should be long term sellers of the Canadian dollar
and long-term buyers of Gold. Charts with buy signals also
available on Euro Gold, pound Gold and Silver.
References:
Hillier, D.,
Draper, P. & Faff, R. (2006, March/April). Do precious metals
shine? An investment perspective. Financial Analyst Journal,
62(2), 98-106.
Holden, S.A.
& VanDerhei, J.L.(2006,Third Quarter). 401(k) plan participant
asset allocation in 2004. Benefits Quarterly, 37-47.
Ibbotson
Associates(2005).Portfolio diversification with gold, silver,
and platinum. Chicago: Ibbotson Associates.

GO TO TOP
© 2006 Ned W. Schmidt
Archived
Editorials
Ned
W. Schmidt,CFA,CEBS is publisher of THE VALUE VIEW GOLD
REPORT. That report now includes a weekly message, TRADING
THOUGHTS, to help investors identify timely points for
buying Gold and Silver. His monumental report, "$1,265
GOLD", with 255 pages and 98 graphs, is now widely known,
and is available at www.amazon.com
or from the author by clicking HERE
This work has now been read by investors in over twelve countries
around the world. Ned welcomes your comments and questions. His
mission in life is to rescue investors from the abyss of financial assets
and the coming collapse of the U.S. dollar. He
can be contacted by Email.
Please remember that no method is perfect nor is the one
running the model.
All estimated returns are for the model portfolio and
do not reflect those earned on actual portfolios.
|