"No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American Public" - H. L. Mencken
"Few people have lost money underestimating the
competence of the modern Federal Reserve" - Whitmore's Corollary to Mencken
Back in the Saddle
Apologies to those of you who have been left hanging for twenty-three
months since my last blog post. Two years
ago, I felt very good about the direction I had been heading with my latest (using
that word very liberally) missives. While
spending time reviewing all of the posts, I believe the analysis and advice
contained therein are still sound and applicable. So, time to take up the cause again for the
handful of you out there who may be interested in more thoughts on successful
investing.
The goal of this blog has never been to engage in specific
recommendations for personal finance;
although as you will see, I will violate that precept below. Rather, my hope has always been to encourage
and equip people to think in a
manner befitting a successful investor. I
will continue to press ahead with that vision.
What has been happening over the last two years? Quite a bit as it turns out. Most importantly, I have become a new father!! Kai Yoo Whitmore entered our lives almost
eleven months ago. I cannot express how
transforming he has been for both Mina and me.
We are so blessed to have such a precious and wonderful soul for whom to
care and to love. To give the little
fellow a bit more room to roam, we have also moved into a larger home that was
in foreclosure last January. Finally, I
am in the process of moving into money management after doing full-time
investing for the last nine years. That
should serve as a brief, if exceptionally truncated, personal recap. On to the world of investing.
Proud Papa
So What is So
Precious About Some Metals?
Recently, I was on a plane returning from a conference in
LA. While I consider myself a reasonably
affable person, my strategy concerning plane travel is to, while not being
impolite, generally avoid conversations extending beyond brief
pleasantries. Call it a form of PTSD
perhaps, stemming from a few too many cross-country flights seated next to overly
loquacious individuals sans reading materials or entertainment devices. I had just cracked open my book when I could
not help but eavesdrop upon the conversation between two professionals seated
next to me.
"Sure, it is pretty to look at, but for what is it
really useful?"
"Well, it does have some inherent value, right? I mean, doesn't it have some dental
applications?"
"Nah, gold is not worth crap. Even its dental uses have become
obsolete. What is possibly the point of
owning it? I mean look at your
ring. It probably cost a lot. But do you know tungsten carbide costs a tiny
fraction of gold, yet is more resilient, and even more reflective?"
"Interesting point.
So you think that gold is overvalued?"
"Absolutely! I
mean it is only worth anything
because people have always said it was 'valuable.' Remove people's perceptions and it is a
worthless metal. Trust me, gold is a
bubble that will burst."
Given my conversations with friends and acquaintances, my
opinionated fellow traveler embodies the perceptions of many, many
individuals. Particularly in light of
the fact that gold is now trading at the upper end of it historic valuation
levels, this seems to be a particularly good time to address what role, if any,
owning gold and other precious metals should occupy in one's portfolio.
By way of full disclosure, I am not a disinterested
individual when it comes to precious metals.
I began accumulating gold around $300/oz., silver at about $8/oz. and
platinum at approximately $800 oz. Over
the years, I have gradually added to my positions, particularly when there have
been significant pull-backs in price. I
have never sold an ounce of any of the metals in my possession, regardless of
market gyrations. When I first
recommended gold as an attractive asset class here, it was almost three years
and $900/oz. ago. Clearly, I find value where
my travel companion did not.
In Defense of Gold
The first issue implicitly raised by the gentlemen
discussing gold is something called the paradox of value. Indeed, tungsten carbide probably is a
material that has infinitely greater utility than gold. However, it is even more obvious that water
is of far greater practical use than diamonds.
Yet I would scarcely expect the price of the latter to collapse
(although I would not be surprised to see an escalation in the price of the
former, a discussion for another time).
In essence, the conceptualization of my skeptical friend concerning gold's
value was completely divorced from scarcity.
While water and tungsten carbide may both have huge practical use
advantages, they are both relatively common.
While diamonds and gold may both suffer from being of limited use
industrially, their scarcity helps makes them extremely valuable.
When gold was trading in the $300-800 range, I used to call
it an insurance policy that paid you a premium to hold it in the form of
significant expected capital appreciation.
And while it can no longer be called historically "cheap" (although
this is not to say that gold does not have room to appreciate further), I would
argue that it merits a place in every investor's portfolio.
What I mean by an insurance policy is that precious metals,
and gold in particular, are the ultimate anti-crash assets. I am not talking about any type of crash
here. Precious metals went down with
virtually all other assets back in the '08-'09 financial implosion (although
gold went down very little by way of comparison to the vast majority of assets).
No, the kind of crash I am talking about is the sort when currencies
collapse.
Now I know that most people tend to view the integrity of
the US dollar as sacrosanct. It has been
the reserve currency for three generations now.
If you talk to most traditional money managers, they will tell you the
"safest" asset is US government bonds. After all, they have the "full faith and
credit" of the federal government backing them and are denominated in the
almighty dollar.
I see such faith as deeply misplaced. Without going into too much detail at this
point, the US can be characterized as "Greece Lite." For years now, our public finances have
been deteriorating quite dramatically. The most
recent skirmish between Republicans and Democrats over raising the debt ceiling
is just the beginning of a what will be a protracted process in an effort by
policy-makers to make Uncle Sam's balance sheet remotely solvent, one which I
think will most likely lead to stalemates and "kicking the can down the
road." Or simply put, politics as
usual.
We as a nation are having the ignominious distinction of
seeing our Debt-to-GDP ratio surpass 1.00.
What does that mean, and why does it matter? Well, in order to clear our federal balance
sheet, we would collectively have to cough up a cool $15 trillion, or basically
an entire year's worth of total economic
production! That prognosis is actually
rosy if one considers the level of unfunded liabilities (in the form of
Medicare, prescription drug and Social Security obligations). Depending upon the accounting methods
employed, the federal government is in the hole between $60-115 trillion! Considering that the total non-government national
assets equal about $80 trillion, these are problematic obligations.
All Roads Lead to
Inflation
So what is a bloated, decrepit and hoary super-power to do? What the US should do is dramatically slash spending it cannot afford, as well
as non-regressively tax consumption so as to broaden and deepen the tax base. Since this has no chance of being politically
viable with either party, what the government will do is provide more bread and circus to the masses.
The Federal Reserve has already begun to do something that
will effectively lighten the debt load.
It sounds innocuous enough.
Whether gussied up as QE1, QE2 or QEad
infinitum, it is also known as "monetizing the debt." In plain English,
it amounts to the same noxious thing: printing money. Now do not get me wrong. The effect of printing money for the
debtor/counterfeiter is great. That much
cannot be denied. Who would not like a
massive cash infusion that requires no more effort or cost than Bernanke making
a few keystrokes on the Fed's computer system?
The problem is that there is no such thing as a long-term free lunch in the world of
finance and economics. Whether it was
Nero debasing the silver content of the denarius almost two-thousand years ago or
Mugabe debasing the Zimbabwe dollar to the point of literal worthlessness in
2008, students of economic history know that the results of money printing are
eventually ruinous.
This leads us to the two main reasons why people should
consider holding metals like gold, silver and platinum. First, precious metals are a storehouse of value. I am old enough to remember with some
vividity the stagflation of the 70's.
Most non-tangible assets did not keep up with the level of inflation. Hence stocks and bonds underperformed. People's standard of living declined as the
dollar bought less and less over time.
Inflation typically is characterized by confiscation of wealth through
the decline of real purchasing power by most citizens.
One of the few assets to perform spectacularly well during
the 70's and into the very early 80's was gold, literally increasing in price
more than twenty-two fold from trough to peak.
When dollars are being created willy-nilly, the amount of available gold
barely budges every year. I noted in a
past post that the world's supply of gold would fit into a cube slightly larger
than sixty-feet on each side; pretty rare stuff indeed. When thinking about the price of gold, both
today and in the future, it would behoove investors to consider the denominator
- the US dollar. It is simple economics
that as the supply of something goes up, the clearing price of that item should
decline. Logically, if the amount of
dollars created is dramatically increasing (which it is), yet the amount of
gold is remaining relatively fixed (which is also true), the value of the
latter in terms of the former should increase.
Second, gold is worthy of occupying a place in portfolios
because it constitutes holding real
currency. I once had a prolonged
discussion with a financial services professional who had substantial assets
under his management. He expressed
incredulity at my assertion that gold represented an attractive asset class (this
was even before gold breached $1000/oz.). When I pressed him for his assessment of
desirable investments, he identified short-term treasuries and cash as the best
places to be in uncertain, volatile times.
I was taken aback by what I saw as a glaring contradiction in his
analysis. On one hand, he rejected gold
as it was a "barbarous relic" that had no intrinsic value and
generated no income. On the other hand,
he placed a large portion of his clients' funds in US dollars, which as a fiat
currency has no intrinsic value and,
in a zero-percent interest rate environment, generated essentially no income. Furthermore, whereas gold is an element whose
supply could not be increased at the discretion of desperate central bankers,
the same most certainly cannot be said of US dollars. So which would you rather hold over
time? Which would you be more confident
will get you a decent amount of goods and services in the future? Which asset will not be debased in the future?
I find it noteworthy that, controlling for quality of inputs,
gold will buy roughly the same amount of food, clothing and shelter today as it
did centuries ago. Indeed, most people
forget that for years the only paper money that held value over long periods of
time were those backed by a gold standard, and that as recently as 1971, the US
backed its currency with gold. The
history of fiat currencies does not bode well for the future of the US dollar
untethered to a gold standard.
Bubble Babble
One of the most common arguments I hear from traditional
money managers, pundits and analysts is that at nearly $1800/oz., gold is
clearly in a bubble, having increased in price seven times from its lows about
a decade ago. I think this is
nonsense. This is not to say that gold
cannot experience a dramatic pullback from here. I could easily see it declining by as much as
30%, depending upon macroeconomic events going forward. But having shorted tech stocks in 2000, and
mortgage lenders several years after that, I feel as if asset bubble analysis
is a personal forte. And I see none of the traditional signs of a
bubble when it comes to the prices of precious metals.
For instance, I actually know very few individuals that own
gold, much less any other precious metal.
I can literally count on one hand the number of people of whom I am
aware whose portfolio comprises more than 10% gold or other precious
metals. Amongst money managers, exposure
to gold is even rarer. My favorite
investment guru, Marc Faber, describes speaking before hundreds of money
management professionals and asking everyone in the crowd who owns gold to
raise their hands; nary an arm moves.
Ownership of silver or platinum (which is interestingly trading at less
than the price of gold - a relative historical anomaly) is far rarer.
As far as I am concerned, the ultimate litmus test for an
asset bubble is my not-exactly-patented "cocktail chatter
index." So far, it is two for
two. In the late 90's and into 2000, I
could barely pick up a martini (or more truthfully a Midori sour) without
hearing someone rave about their returns in Xyz.com. Fast-forward seven years and I was unable to
quaff a glass of syrah without being assaulted with tales of zero-down
mortgages, condo-flipping and acquisition of "investment properties." To date I have yet to be verbally accosted by
anyone claiming to have doubled their money by owning gold bullion or to have
financed a vacation by owning silver futures.
When that happens, I will have to reconsider my analysis.
Tread Cautiously
Importantly, I am not predicting an imminent rise in the
price of precious metals. As I
mentioned, I think there is a very good chance that we could see price declines
from these levels. But from a long-term perspective, I think precious
metals represent a very good risk-reward profile. This is particularly true when considering
what I believe to be relatively unattractive prospects in more traditional
assets such as equities and (especially) government bonds.
What would change my analysis or cause me to be wrong in my
expectations for precious metals? Quite
simply, a debt-deflation trap should the Fed and/or other key central bankers
be unsuccessful in their efforts to reflate the world economy through massive
monetary stimulus. Personally, I think
it is more likely than not that Bernanke and his ilk will be successful in
their efforts to de facto destroy the
credibility of the US dollar. But
nothing in investing is a sure thing.
Accordingly, I think if investors presently have no exposure
to gold and other precious metals, it would be worthwhile to consider
purchasing small quantities at regular intervals (monthly or quarterly
perhaps). To have less than 5% of one's
portfolio in precious metals is, in my opinion, a serious oversight. A higher weighting would be even more
desirable.
I promise it will be earlier than the Fall of 2013 before
another post!
Welcome back to commentary, Mark! Every congratulation on your new fatherhood--that's fantastic!
ReplyDeleteI thoroughly enjoy your analyses, and read them carefully as I have some small interests of my own along these lines. I agree with you about the threat to the currency represented by quantitative easing, and the inevitable inflation that must result, per Friedman's analysis. (You no doubt know that renowned economist Paul Krugman opines the opposite, stating that despite the presses rolling, inflation is not yet in view and economic recovery at the moment calls for MORE, not less, QE. Perhaps he is channeling Keynes' famous maxim that "in the long run, we will all be dead.")
I have enjoyed studying quite a lot of Geology in the last few years, and anticipate a degree in that subject by this time next year. One of the things I have learned about minerals, metals and gems in that study is leading me toward investments not in gold, silver and platinum, which do indeed have limited industrial use value, but rather toward rare earths and metals, which have much greater scarcity and are much more critical to modern technology. Fodder for a very long conversation sometime, old friend.
One small quibble with your analysis, however: You state, "While diamonds and gold may both suffer from being of limited use industrially, their scarcity helps makes them extremely valuable." Actually from an economic geology perspective this is precisely backwards, at least for diamonds. As the hardest known natural substance, diamonds' industrial utility is high and rising--ca. 80% of mined diamonds are used in industry, and synthetic diamonds are now relatively easily manufactured to increase that quantity ca. fourfold.
And despite the relentless marketing efforts of De Beers and their ilk, actually even gem diamonds are not particularly scarce--they are much less rare than many other kinds of gems. The number of locations in which diamonds can be found has increased for decades; although the rate of new ore deposit discoveries may be flat at the moment, supply is still ahead of demand and any shortage is some time in the future--much farther than for the rare earths I referenced earlier. Gemstone-quality diamonds are rarer--but there is essentially no resale value for them unless they are extremely high-end. (If you doubt this, ask your local jeweler what he would give you for the diamonds in an old ring. He might buy the ring--but for the gold!)
Keep on writing! Good stuff!
So I was at my son's soccer game yesterday and this pudgy old man with an Hungarian accent keeps saying to me, "Dis gold bubble is going down! Get out vile you kan!"
ReplyDeleteThanks for the insight Mark. Whenever I imagine buying gold, images of my grandfather come to mind. He was a scrap metal dealer who kept the real stuff in a safe in the front room. He liked copper too but that stayed in the barn.
In what form do you purchase precious metals? Physical, futures, ETF's, etc?
Be well,
Matt Owen
Great stuff Mark. I'll be reading more this weekend. Erin Scannell
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