All eyes are on gold, as the yellow metal has just dipped below the psychologically-important $1,500 level. Major high-profile speculators — including George Soros — now appear to be taking some of their bets off the table.
Investors now have a choice: Should they use the recent weakness as an opportunity to buy more gold or, like Soros, should they take their profits and move on to greener pastures?
The bullish case for gold is straightforward. The government is spending money it doesn’t have, and the Fed is doing everything in its power to weaken the dollar. Standard & Poor’s, in a classic case of closing the barn door after the horse has already bolted, added credence to this argument with its decision to lower its outlook on the United States’ AAA credit rating last month.
Still, investors would be wise to avoid gold, even after the recent pullback. Gold today is as risky as tech stocks in 1999 and Miami condos in 2005, and the arguments supporting its rise are every bit as flimsy.
Let’s take a look at some of these arguments and how they stand up to a brief reality check.
Myth #1: Gold is an investment
Let’s start with the very basics. I would define an investment as an asset that creates value and income over time. Stocks, bonds, real estate, and even livestock and productive machinery would all qualify. This is in contrast to “speculation,” which is a purchase based purely on the hope of selling at a higher price at some point in the future.
Ben Graham, the mentor of Warren Buffett and father of the investment profession as we know it today, had referred to speculation as the “greater fool” theory. The idea goes, “I know I am a fool to pay such a high price for a stock, but I know that a greater fool will come along and pay me an even higher price.” Graham was speaking of common stocks, but the same argument could be made about Miami condos, Dutch tulip bulbs, or even baseball cards and Beanie Babies. And it certainly applies to gold today.
Speaking of Buffett, the Oracle of Omaha has had some choice words for the barbarous relic over the years. One of my favorites is an off-the-cuff remark he made in a recent interview with Ben Stein:
You could take all the gold that's ever been mined, and it would fill a cube 67 feet in each direction. For what that's worth at current gold prices, you could buy all -- not some -- all of the farmland in the United States. Plus, you could buy 10 Exxon Mobils (XOM), plus have $1 trillion of walking-around money. Or you could have a big cube of metal. Which would you take? Which is going to produce more value?
Gold pays no dividends or interest and produces nothing. It’s an inert metal that you have to pay to store and insure. And yes, your ability to profit from it depends on your being able to sell it to someone else at a higher price than what you paid, plus selling commissions and expenses. Is this a bet you’re comfortable making when it has already risen by a factor of four in a matter of years and the trade is looking increasingly crowded?
There is nothing wrong with speculating, of course, if you understand the risk. The problem comes when you confuse it with investment. And these days, many folks can’t tell the difference.
Myth #2: Gold is a store of value
Plenty of gold bugs concede the metal is not a traditional “investment,” per se, but argue passionately that its purpose is not speculative. Instead, it is a durable store of value in a world of disposable paper fiat currencies.
Unfortunately, the facts simply do not support this view. That’s because gold is a great store of value — except when it’s not. Had you become fed up with the inflation of the Jimmy Carter years and moved your savings to gold in 1980, you would have watched your “store of value” fall by 70% in the two decades that followed. And this would have happened during a period of persistent (though falling) inflation.
Meanwhile, the raging bull market in gold since 2000 can hardly be considered “stable.” Sure, no one complains if their purchasing power rises. But if your stated purpose in buying gold is its role as a store of value, even volatility to the upside should be unsettling.
As for an asset often touted as a “crisis hedge,” gold also performed remarkably poorly during the 2008 meltdown. Gold went into freefall in September and October 2008 after the Lehman Brothers failure knocked the financial world off its axis. Not a very effective insurance policy, in my opinion.
Lastly, if protection from the ravages of inflation is so crucial to investors, then why not shop around for a quality rental property? Plenty of desperate owners would happily exchange their real estate for some of that “worthless” green paper. But to the true die-hard gold believer, the idea of buying real estate at depressed prices to hedge against inflation and a plummeting dollar is seen as a fool’s errand, while buying gold at record levels is seen as the only safe bet. It’s easy to point to gold as a store of value when prices are rising. But they won’t rise forever.
Myth #3: Gold is a contrarian trade
This claim is almost laughable, but it wasn’t born in a vacuum. Gold bugs have lived on the fringes of the investment world for so long they view themselves as the perpetual voices in the wilderness, as rebels set against the Wall Street establishment. But today, gold is every bit as mainstream as stocks and bonds. It’s now on the front page of Yahoo Finance, for crying out loud, and every major city in America is littered with “We Buy Gold” billboards.
American retail and institutional interest in gold has surged via exchange-traded funds like the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), and now Chinese investors are piling into gold via brand-new gold ETFs trading in mainland China.
Gold has even wormed its way into the Islamic banking system. The Financial Times recently reported that several of Turkey’s sharia-compliant banks have begun offering gold deposit accounts, exchange-traded funds and even gold-dispensing ATM machines. Turkey, the world's fourth-largest market for gold jewelry, recently became a net exporter of the yellow metal, as Turks now sell more existing jewelry for scrap than they buy (see Melting Ottoman Gold).
Gold’s popularity transcends nationality, religion and culture — and its price has also moved in virtual lockstep with stocks and other “risk” assets since the bear market bottom of March 2009. A popular investment that moves the same direction as all other risky assets … does this sound like a contrarian investment to you?
A true contrarian would view gold’s universal popularity as a warning sign. He might also be concerned by the deterioration of gold’s primary traditional use, jewelry. Consider that India has seen a decline in gold jewelry sales since 2005despite an economic boom, and that worldwide there has been a massive shift away from gold use in luxury goods to gold in “investment” uses in the last decade. In fact, the portion of gold used for “investment” jumped by a factor of 65 from 2000 to 2010 (see Gold: A Bad Investment and Getting Worse).
It’s worth mentioning that the last time gold used for investment exceeded gold used for jewelry was 1980 — the year the last gold bubble burst.
I’ll end with two anecdotal signs that tell me the end of the gold boom is nigh: First, the state of Utah recently made gold legal tender in the state. It was a political stunt, of course, since using gold bullion to buy a cup of coffee or even a car is impractical. But when any asset class has become this politicized, investors might want to keep their distance.
And lastly, finally, Ayn Rand’s magnum opus Atlas Shrugged has finally made it to the silver screen. I admit, the libertarian in me really does like Rand’s work and her unapologetic defense of capitalism. But her work’s fixation on the arcane details of political issues — like the role of gold in monetary policy – has long made her work seem unmarketable in popular culture. It is no coincidence that the debut of Atlas comes at a time when gold is at an all-time high, and when such views are fashionable.
Bottom line: Gold’s bull run is based on weak arguments that don’t hold up to scrutiny. Investors might want to follow Soros’s lead and get out while the getting is good. I might suggest they follow Buffett’s advice and move their attention to attractively priced stocks paying reliable dividends.
Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.
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