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Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: goldsheet who wrote (72351)6/25/2001 7:03:10 PM
From: long-gone  Respond to of 116836
 
logistics, huh?



To: goldsheet who wrote (72351)6/25/2001 7:05:18 PM
From: baystock  Respond to of 116836
 
We have a sneaky, clandestine bull market in gold...

Michael Kane Vancouver Sun
The world's oldest asset
class is often under-represented in otherwise
well-diversified investment portfolios.

Until 20 years ago, popular
wisdom said mom-and-pop investors should keep about 10
per cent of their money in gold stocks, both to profit
from rising global demand and as a hedge against
inflation. Gold generally skyrockets when currencies
stumble.

Popular wisdom has been
knocked sideways, however, with the world's leading
central banks coordinating their efforts to keep
inflation under control and depressing gold prices by
selling off hefty portions of their reserves.

Today, most investors have
less than three-per-cent exposure to gold through equity
mutual funds.

Fred Sturm, manager of the
Mackenzie Universal Precious Metals Fund, says the
pendulum has swung too far. While the price of gold has
remained stagnant for more than two decades, he is
anticipating a gradual turn in the precious metals
sector.

"We would say investors
should have somewhere between five and 10 per cent of
their portfolios in gold," he said in a telephone
interview from Toronto.

Chief among Sturm's reasons
are rising inflation, pressure on the U.S. dollar from
its growing trade deficit with the rest of the world,
and falling interest rates which historically favour
gold and squeeze short-sellers out of the market.

He also says it is important
to remember that gold is a safe haven in volatile
markets.

Certainly, the market has
taken a shine to gold. The Toronto Stock Exchange
Precious Metals Index recently hit a 52-week high --
rising 30 per cent this year -- while the TSE as a whole
is down 10 per cent for the same period.

Sturm's fund is a top
performer, up 33.1 per cent year to date and up 40 per
cent in the last year. The numbers are almost
unprecedented in the sector.

"It is a very large spread,"
Sturm says. "Not only has the fund outperformed the TSE,
but more significant is the value added by professional
management relative to the underlying gold index.

"What we are anticipating is
that this is a major long-term turn in the
precious-metals complex. We have a sneaky, clandestine
bull market in gold because many of the things that were
negative have become less negative and some that were
positive are actually becoming more positive."

For example, Sturm suggests
the dampening effect of central banks selling off gold
may soon come to an end, and we could see one or two
central banks returning to the market as buyers.

Britain, for example, has
reduced its reserves below the level it would be
required to maintain for entry into the European
monetary union.

If a central bank started to
buy, strong supply and demand fundamentals broad terms,
about 3,600 tonnes of gold are demanded every year,
primarily for jewelry, and only 2,500 tonnes are mined.

"We estimate we would need a
price somewhere in the $350-to-$375 range to bring
supply and demand closer together," Sturm says. "Today,
we are at $273."

While some commentators
suggest the recent nine-year high in inflation was a
one-time event driven by soaring energy prices, Sturm
says businesses from car manufacturers to potato farmers
are trying to maximize profitability by producing less
and charging more.

"We have forgotten that
investors should protect against inflation," he says.

"The bottom line is if the
price of gas, the price of gold, the price of what
materials is going up, and you're not participating in
some way, then you aren't being protected from
inflation."

Sturm, at least, is putting
his investors' money where his mouth is.

While his $45-million fund
has traditionally held as much as one-third of its
portfolio in other precious metals such as diamonds,
platinum and palladium, he has recently reduced that
exposure by half to reflect his growing confidence in
gold.