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Over the past few years, we've seen the beginning of a move away from paper
assets and towards tangible investments and stores of value.
Check the news and you'll see the trend is clear. Wealthy investors, wary
of the stock market and the machinations of Wall Street salesmen, are embracing "alternative
investments" such as hedge-funds, commodities and commodity-related investments,
and art. Economic growth in Asia is leading to increased demand for time honored
stores of wealth. In India and China, the burgeoning middle classes will step
up their purchases of precious metals and increasingly, diamonds. Global investment
demand for gold has grown and this, as a result, is leading to a revived interest
in silver's monetary value.
Private investors are not the only ones getting in on the act. Central banks
across the globe are now diversifying out of some of their dollar holdings
and heading back into gold. Pension and endowment funds are moving some of
their assets into precious metals and commodity futures. Meanwhile, other institutional
and retail investors are gaining exposure to the commodities market through
various ETFs and ETNs.
So what is driving this move into tangible assets? As mentioned earlier, investors
souring on financial products and services offered by brokerages and banks
might partly explain the shift. Another factor may be a growing sense of distrust
of fiat currencies. Sophisticated investors and ordinary savers alike are once
again waking up to the fact that official inflation statistics often fail to
accurately reflect their rising cost of living. They see their purchasing power
evaporating before their eyes and will naturally want to mitigate that loss
with some tangible store of value.
This phenomenon may be playing itself out again here in the U.S. as a sort
of throwback to the 1970s era of inflation. The difference between the 1970s
and the present is that we now have a large group of moneyed Russian, Chinese,
and Indian buyers vying for the same assets. Be it gold bullion, contemporary
art, or antiquities, the market for these tangibles is no longer limited to
rich Westerners. For more on this, see the December 2004 article, "Art
as Investment, Inflation Hedge".
For all these reasons and more, the pendulum has started to shift towards
a preference for tangible assets. In fact, research by Barry
Bannister puts this shift into perspective by categorizing the present
period as an inflation cycle in which commodities and tangibles tend to outperform
paper assets.
Investors and analysts such as Jim Rogers, Marc Faber, Richard Russell, and
Jim Puplava have echoed this theme and expanded on it. Anyone seeking to better
understand the current economic and investment environment would do well to
seek out their writings.
And for those who would like an added look at how this trend is shaping current
events, the Financial Times Wealth section covers us nicely.
To find out how investors and speculators are gaining exposure to commodity
returns through exchange-traded notes, have a look at John Authers' article, "A
new and less expensive way to bet on oil".
On tracking art returns, see Deborah Brewster's, "Buying
painting by numbers".
For a current look at the demand for rare objects, see Kathryn Tully's article, "Antiquities
weather the market".
And last but not least, John Dizard's piece entitled, "Every
cloud for the stock market has a golden lining".
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