By Michael Rawson, CFA is an ETF analyst with Morningstar.
At a joint meeting of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank held in Tokyo in October, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke said that central bankers in emerging economies should "refrain from intervening in foreign-exchange markets, thereby allowing the currency to rise." Of course, for one currency to rise, another must fall. It can be argued that the Fed chairman was suggesting that the U.S. dollar is overvalued and could be due for a decline.
At a joint meeting of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank held in Tokyo in October, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke said that central bankers in emerging economies should "refrain from intervening in foreign-exchange markets, thereby allowing the currency to rise." Of course, for one currency to rise, another must fall. It can be argued that the Fed chairman was suggesting that the U.S. dollar is overvalued and could be due for a decline.
Elsewhere Bernanke has emphasized on several occasions that monetary
policy, controlled by the central bank, is doing all it can to spur the
economy and that fiscal policy, the purview of the government, needs to
be more aggressive. In recent decades, monetary policy has been run
independently of fiscal policy. That said, many claim that the Fed has
become increasingly politicized, and some politicians have gone so far
as to suggest that Ben Bernanke be fired or that the government should
strip control of monetary policy from the Fed and return to the gold
standard.
Meanwhile, though the Fed’s policies of quantitative easing are
potentially inflationary, inflation has been benign to date. But many
investors, fearful of equities since the financial crisis and spooked by
the specter of inflation in an era of "QEternity," have increasingly
considered gold for their portfolios. Gold has historically proved to be
an effective inflation hedge, and a declining dollar is positive for
bullion prices. But just what role should gold play in a traditional
stock and bond portfolio? In this article, we will examine where gold
might fit in your portfolio and highlight our favorite exchange-traded
funds that offer exposure to the yellow metal.
Hard to Value, Hard to Ignore
Unlike productive assets such as farmland or dividend-paying stocks,
gold seems to lack the fundamental characteristics necessary for
valuation. With gold there will be no stream of widgets to sell or cash
flows to discount. Warren Buffett famously mused on gold: “[Gold] gets
dug out of the ground in Africa, or someplace. Then we melt it down, dig
another hole, bury it again and pay people to stand around guarding it.
It has no utility. Anyone watching from Mars would be scratching their
head.” While Martians may be scratching their heads, it seems that many
rational investors covet gold. Ben Bernanke has argued that gold is not
money and that it is held by central banks largely out of tradition. He
has also offered some insight into the way many investors value gold.
The Fed chairman has said that people hold gold as a protection against
tail risk--low probability events with big implications. These so-called
“black swans” might include a massive sell-off in the stock market or
hyperinflation.
Reliable data for gold prices from the London Bullion Market
Association extends back to 1973. If we regress the price of gold on
movements in the stock market and next year’s inflation back to 1973, we
find that the price of gold responds positively to both increases in
inflation and declines in the stock market.
Two time periods play a big role in explaining this relationship. The
stock market fell 15% in 1973 and a further 26% in 1974. Meanwhile,
inflation jumped from 3% in 1972 to 9% in 1973 and ramped up to 12% in
1974. During this span, gold proved a fantastic inflation hedge,
climbing 73% in 1973 and 66% in 1974. Gold proved its worth as a
tail-risk hedge again during the most recent financial crisis, rising 4%
in 2008 when the S&P 500 Index plummeted 37%. For the 10 years
through year-end 2011, gold was up 450%, trouncing the 30% return of the
S&P 500 Index.
The charts below show the annual performance of gold based on sorting and bucketing stocks or inflation into five buckets.
- source: Morningstar Analysts
- source: Morningstar Analysts
How Much to Own? And Where Does It Fit?
An asset that rises in value when most other assets decline
should be very valuable. It can be thought of as a kind of insurance. To
insure against bad times (that is, the aforementioned tail risks),
people are willing to accept small losses in good times. Because the
price of gold is sensitive to changes in inflation or the prospects of a
disaster, a little bit goes a long way. For those who have decided to
own some gold in their portfolios, we feel that 5% is an appropriate
weight. This study
from Campbell Harvey and Claude Erb suggests a 2% weight of gold in the
market portfolio while an Ibbotson study suggests at least a 7% weight.
So, how does gold fit into a portfolio? A 60/40 portfolio of stocks
and bonds will have a slightly higher return and slightly lower risk
when holding a 5% position in gold, resulting in a higher risk-adjusted
return.
From 1973 through September 2012, a 60/40 portfolio of the
S&P 500 Index and intermediate-term government bonds had an
annualized return of 9.4% and an annualized standard deviation of 9.9%.
Adding a 5% position to gold and reducing stocks to 58% and bonds to 37%
would increase the portfolio's annualized return to 9.6% and reduce its
annualized standard deviation to 9.4%. That slightly higher return is
mostly a function of the time period chosen. Over the past hundred years
or so, stocks have massively outperformed gold. So, over the long term,
investors could have earned higher returns in stocks and bonds but the
overall portfolio risk would have been lower with a small position in
gold, resulting in better risk-adjusted returns.
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