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Since 1985 to 2007 the developed world
has seen the sophisticated development of equity and fixed interest rate
markets that has ensured that investments are aimed at a positive, growth
future for the economies on the west side of the globe. All the skills and
beliefs in markets have been consistent with that expectation. When the
credit crunch came, the belief was that the powers that be would rectify
matters and we would be back to the same rosy future once the hurdles had
been surmounted. But here we are, ending 2011 and that rosy future has given
way to an uncertain one where the very structures on which the rosy future
had been built have stated to buckle and falter. Despite this, the adjustment
by institutions has been slow to recognize these changes and the process of
making markets face this new reality has been as slow as politicians have
been to adjust their handling of matters. It’s far more than denial; it is a refusal to change. The
change needed is so fundamental that the careers and very way of life of
financial manager would be at risk. Hence the poor efforts we see in changing
the financial world. This is taking the path we walk in the financial world
to a precipitous, almost cathartic point at an unquantifiable date ahead of
us when we see pressures exerted to change that way we live our lives.
Rather like a drought in a hot summer
when the grass and bush dry out, the risks of fire are growing by the day.
The drier the undergrowth the less the spark needed to start a most
destructive fire. It is in this environment that we find ourselves now. It is
affecting every single financial market in this global economy and requires
every single portfolio and investment manager to recognize the scene and
adjust investment values accordingly. Those who do this first will reap the
largest rewards. Those who do not will find themselves way behind the crowd.
This is particularly pertinent in the precious metal worlds. It brings us to
the point in our series on ‘changing ones portfolio to adjust to these
days’ to the question of, “Do I hold gold bullion itself or gold
shares. As with all such questions the answer is not simple and
straightforward.
The Rosy Past
In the last 25 years gold mining shares
have followed the way of most equities focusing on capital growth and through
that, rewarding shareholders. In the last couple of years we have seen this
change favor those companies that pay across dividends to their shareholders
reflecting their profits as the gold price rose. This immediately points to a
change that is now today’s reality, that mining shares must reward
shareholders with dividends. This implies that while a mining share is still
an equity [but with a great product] carrying all the corporate risks that
attend equities and suffering the rising costs that come with rising profits
[the mining industry is susceptible to this in particular] each one must be
carefully looked at before we can give a simple answer to the question in the
title of this essay.
In the earlier parts of this series we
defined what to look for in the precious metal equity. We highlighted the
criteria that apply to getting the best out of these shares, so we will take
a mining share that met these criteria as the basis for our comparison. Any
other share that does not meet these criteria will clearly not perform as
well, so will underperform both gold bullion and the shares that do meet our
criteria. So let’s look at the information we have on the performance
of gold bullion and gold shares. The chart below gives a direct comparison of
a fund, the XAU index and gold bullion itself in the last five years. Bear in
mind that the performance of the gold fund and the XAU index does not add the
cash flow that comes from gold shares. However, when we add this back and the
subsequent accruing of income on income the performance is enhanced. For the
fund, we do have to extract their fees which lower the total return to that
extent. Further to that, if we consider only the shares that meet our
criteria, then their performance will far exceed both the gold fund and the
XAU index.
 
Both Have a Place but
Perform Differently
This tells us that there is a place for
both bullion and selected gold shares in our portfolio. The right share will
give an outstanding performance that can outrun gold bullion any day, but
that performance comes from it reaching different milestones in time and its
own growth.
At what point does a gold share see the
spurt in its share price.
1. When an
un-mined deposit turns from a gold resource to a gold reserve by
“official” recognition [by a NI 43-101 confirmation] doubts about
the size of the deposit are removed as are the unforeseen difficulties in
mining that deposit. At this point the larger gold mining companies [really
mining finance houses owning several mines] may show a real interest in
taking share in the deposit.
2. Once a
feasibility study is complete showing just how feasible the subsequent mining
operation will be and the difficulties that may face the mine and its costs,
then the company is in a position to raise the finance to begin. This may
come from the markets, the forwards sale of identified gold in the ground or
from a mining company buying shares in the operation and bringing it to
production.
3. It can take
several year to turn the deposit into a producing mine. Management must be
selected, the operation must be financed, (i.e. loans, equity) and the
corporate shape defined. This will give the operation an identifiable price
which the market will discount through its pricing of the shares in the mine
or adjustment of the shares of the company that bought it (subject to the
expected impact it will have on the overall balance sheet of the owning
company).
4. When the gold
or silver price jumps, gold shares will follow to some extent but will, overall, wait until the average gold price for the period in
question, has risen. After all, it is from the cash in the bank that the
company will pay dividends or not. Until then the gold or silver price may go
either way.
The prices of gold and silver themselves
are not affected by any of the above factors. Their prices in the last six
years have been driven by two distinctly different forces.
On the one hand, gold and silver have
reflected the fall of currencies. As confidence in currencies has waned, so
the price of precious metals has risen. This is really a bear market in
currencies and not so much a bull market in precious metals. On the other
hand the demand base for precious metals has broadened and deepened across
the world. As you can see in the accompanying table the developed world now
only accounts for a total of less than 20% of total jewelry, coin and bar
demand, whereas the emerging world from Turkey eastwards accounts for
somewhere around 80% and the flow of demand remains unabated.
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