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  2008-06-05 17:52:41
  Can Gold counter inflation & currency fluctuations?

Commodity Online
The real value of gold is not that it provides a quick, speculative fix, but that it can provide a sure and steady means of protecting wealth and enhance the consistency of returns.

With gold's role as a portfolio diversifier, a hedge against inflation and exposure to the dollar, there are several compelling arguments for investing a portion of one's portfolio in the yellow metal.

Most investment portfolios are invested primarily in traditional financial assets such as stocks and bonds. The reason for holding diverse investments is to protect the portfolio against fluctuations in the value of any single asset class. Portfolios that contain gold are generally more robust and better able to cope with market uncertainties than those that don't.

Adding gold to a portfolio introduces an entirely different class of asset. Gold is unusual because it is both a commodity and a monetary asset and is an effective diversifier because its performance tends to move independently of other investments.

Independent studies have shown that traditional diversifiers such as bonds often fail during times of market stress or instability. Even a small allocation of gold has been shown to significantly improve the consistency of portfolio performance during both stable and unstable financial periods. Gold can improve the stability and predictability of returns. The performance of gold is not correlated with other assets because the gold price is not driven by the same factors that drive the performance of other assets.

Gold is often cited as being an effective hedge against fluctuations in the US dollar, the world's main trading currency. If the dollar appreciates, the dollar gold price falls and similarly a fall in the dollar relative to the other main currencies produces a rise in the gold price.

In a recent study by leading metals consultancy GFMS Ltd, the strength of the link between twenty-two commodities and the US dollar was examined. The results clearly suggested that not only is gold a more potent hedge against the dollar than other commodities, but also that protection is provided when most needed (when the dollar is losing value), with relatively little upside foregone during a period of dollar appreciation.

Like all physical commodities, gold is an asset that bears no credit risk. Holding assets in the yellow metal involves no counterparty and is no one's liability. In addition to that, the physical properties of the metal make it an excellent alternative to money.

Gold is durable. Unlike many of the other commodities examined, other things remaining equal (i.e. assuming no changes in price), there is no depreciation in the value of gold, other than any storage costs that might apply. Gold is fungible. It is, at least in theory, infinitely divisible with virtually no losses (other than any operational costs the process might incur).

Furthermore, gold has a high value to volume ratio, which makes it easily transferable, with low transport and storage costs. Moreover, gold is one of the deepest commodity markets with the highest levels of liquidity, second only to oil.

The purchasing power of gold has not diminished since Biblical times. According to the Old Testament, during the reign of King Nebuchadnezzar, an ounce of gold bought 350 loaves of bread. Today, an ounce of gold still buys 350 loaves.

The value of gold therefore, in terms of real goods and services that it can buy, has remained remarkably stable. In contrast, the purchasing power of many currencies has generally declined. There is a growing body of research to bolster gold's reputation as a protector of wealth against the ravages of inflation. Market cycles come and go, but gold has maintained its long term value.

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