Alternative investment: Pedestrians walk pass a precious metal merchant in Hatton Garden, London. Gold has soared after the UK’s vote last week to quit the European Union as investors seek a haven from financial turmoil and contemplate the possible implications. — Reuters
With the rise in uncertainty, investors are coming back to the market, the executive chairman of Australia’s second-biggest producer said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “It is an alternate currency, it’s performed that role” as a haven for over 2,000 years, he said.
Gold has soared after the UK’s vote last week to quit the European Union as investors seek a haven from financial turmoil and contemplate the possible implications. The vote threatens to fragment the world’s largest trading bloc should Britain withdraw, while also calling into question the future of the United Kingdom, with the possibility of Scottish independence. Former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan said Northern Ireland may also break away.
“I guess to me, the most interesting thing is: are we seeing the first fault lines of a major correction and change in the financial and political systems?” he said. “If that’s the case, then we could very well be at the early stages of a major bull market.”
Gold for immediate delivery rallied as much as 8.1% last Friday as poll results came in. The metal, which traded at US$1,311.94 at 4:52pm in Singapore yesterday, peaked in 2011 at US$1,921.17. It’s up 24% in 2016 after gaining to the highest since 2014 last week.
Gold miners have climbed, and holdings in exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have swelled further. Evolution rallied as much 19% last Friday, while in Canada Barrick Gold Corp’s stock closed on Monday at the highest since 2013. Global assets in ETFs expanded 32% this year, rising 12.6 tonnes on Monday.
Banks have also been raising their forecasts for bullion. Morgan Stanley boosted its 2016 outlook by 8% and 2017 view 13%, according to a report received yesterday. Goldman Sachs Group Inc increased its three, six and 12-month targets by US$100, citing flight-to-safety sentiment.
Not everyone is convinced that bullion will prove to be the best bet. Veteran investor Jim Rogers told Bloomberg on Monday he’d rather seek haven in the dollar than gold, given that bullion had already rallied in 2016 before the vote. Prices have risen this year as the US Federal Reserve failed to add to last year’s interest rate rise.
“We’re obviously benefiting a lot from the gold price rise,” Klein said. “I would point out that gold is only over US$1,300 now, and in 2011, it was over US$1,900, so there’s potentially still a long way to go. But certainly interest in gold, interest in gold stocks, and interest in Evolution is rising.” — Bloomberg
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