Golden ticket: The new Wonka movie starring Timothee Chalamet

Golden ticket: The new Wonka movie starring Timothee Chalamet

Golden ticket: The new Wonka movie starring Timothee Chalamet

The new Wonka movie starring Timothee Chalamet isn’t the only golden ticket in town. 

This week the gold price hit a record high, coming in at above $2,100 an ounce and making investors wonder if they should add a little lustre to their portfolios.

Whether you hold it as bullion, invest via a fund or dabble in gold mining, the precious metal holds a unique appeal despite some obvious limitations. 

‘The last time I checked, you can’t pay for your shopping with gold,’ says Rob Burgeman at wealth manager RBC Brewin Dolphin. 

‘And unlike other investments such as shares, it offers no form of income. It can also be quite volatile to world events.’

Nonetheless, Burgeman believes that gold usually warrants a place in most people’s portfolio. The question is, how much should you hold, and how? And as prices are at a record high, is this the worst time to buy in?

Unique characteristics

Anyone who lived through Germany’s hyperinflation in the 1930s understood what gold can do. 

As the currency lost value every day, those who had bought gold with their marks were able to store their wealth safely, rather than ending up with wheelbarrows full of worthless notes.

The metal performs a similar, although less dramatic, function today. Max Belmont, portfolio manager at First Eagle Investments, which runs a gold fund, says that its ability to maintain real purchasing power through extreme events means investors see it as a safe haven.

The more pessimistic you are about the state of the world, the more likely you are to want to hold gold in the hope that the price will go up. 

But many people use it as a diversifier to protect their portfolios from extreme movements, whatever their feeling about the economy.

However, gold itself can be a volatile investment. Global uncertainty tends to push the price up over the long term, but over the short term there can be wide fluctuations.

Higher interest rates also tend to push the price down. That is because gold does not produce an income. When rates are low, that is not so keenly felt by investors. 

But when investors can get a few percentage points on their money simply by putting it in a savings account, the lack of income offered by gold becomes more of a turn-off.

Adrian Ash, who runs BullionVault, which holds physical gold for investors, says that while gold does not always provide an effective hedge in the short-term, it does over longer periods. 

‘It’s no better than a coin toss whether the price of gold will move in the opposite direction to the UK stock market. But on a longer time horizon, gold typically does well when other assets do badly.’

Why is the price of gold rising? 

Gold’s record high price this week is due to a large degree to geopolitical tensions, in particular in Ukraine and the Middle East. 

In the week after the Hamas attacks on Israel, the gold price leapt up six per cent.

Expectations that interest rates may have peaked are also pushing up the price of gold.

It is part of a move to diversify away from the US dollar 
Robert Minter, director of ETF Investment Strategy at Abrdn

The weakening US dollar also influences the price, according to Andrew Prosser, head of investments at ETF platform Investengine. 

The gold price is measured in US dollars, so if the dollar is weaker it boosts the purchasing power of non-US gold buyers. What’s more, central banks around the world are still snapping up the precious metal.

Last year, more than 1,000 tons of gold were purchased by central banks and treasuries. Another 800 tons were bought from January to September this year.

Robert Minter, director of ETF Investment Strategy, at investment group Abrdn says this buying spree is unlikely to stop.

‘It is part of a move to diversify away from the US dollar,’ he says. Minter adds that the majority of the purchases are concentrated in the so-called Brics countries – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

Ash at BullionVault believes the price may be further strengthened by a traditional January buying spree among investment managers. 

He says that gold prices have risen in seven out of the last ten Januaries due to this factor.

‘Portfolio managers look ahead to reposition their spread of assets,’ he says. ‘They tend to focus on the coming year’s risks and threats, and many of them choose gold as a kind of investment insurance.’

But if interest rates remain higher for longer than expected and geopolitical tensions ease, gold may lose its sheen. 

Max Belmont at First Eagle, says that doesn’t stop it serving its purpose as a ‘source of resilience in a wide variety of adverse circumstances’.

‘We don’t forecast the price of gold. We employ it as a strategic position against the frailties that can impact the marketplace,’ he says.

How to invest money in gold 

If you think your portfolio could do with a golden sheen, there are several ways to invest.

The simplest to understand is to buy physical gold, in bars or coins. The downside of this is that you’ll either have to pay to store it or accept quite a hike in your home insurance to have an acceptable safe fitted. You’ll also incur costs if you buy and sell.

Alternatively, you could use an Exchange Traded Fund (ETF), which simply tracks the price of physical gold. Darius McDermott, managing director of fund research group FundCalibre suggests the iShares Physical Gold Fund for this purpose. It is backed by gold bullion and is up over 15 per cent over three years. The ongoing charge for holding this ETF is just 0.12 per cent.

Investing in gold mining companies is another option. You can do this via an ETF too, such as the VanEck Gold Miners ETF, up 2.4 per cent this year but down 8.2 per cent over three years. Or you can buy individual mining stocks such as Fresnillo or Barrick Gold (down 35 per cent and 3.4 per cent this year respectively). 

‘Gold mining companies tend to work in difficult parts of the world and, almost inevitably, that incurs political risk, operational challenges, and more cost,’ warns Burgeman. Fresnillo’s underperformance is a case in point, with labour issues and regulatory changes in Mexico weighing on its share price.

However, Dzmitry Lipski, head of fund research at DIY platform Interactive Investor says that when the gold price rises, these mining firms can be a better option than the metal itself. 

‘As the gold price appreciates, the mining company’s margins improve, so the potential return to investors likely goes up at a faster rate than the rise in gold,’ he explains.

Alternatively, you could choose an open-ended fund or investment trust that is exposed to the gold price, but has an active manager. Personal Assets Trust, down 2.2 per cent so far this year, has nearly 11 per cent of its portfolio in gold bullion. 

James Carthew, head of investment companies at fund specialist QuotedData, says that the trust is focused on growing money but also on not losing money when markets fall, and gold is used as a defensive play.

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This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

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