Kiplinger\'s Personal Finance - 10.2019

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34 KIPLINGER’S PERSONAL FINANCE^ 10/2019

INVESTING


per ounce to $200 an ounce.
Gold’s long-dead period
from 2013 to 2018 prompted
many gold-mining compa-
nies to “repair their balance
sheets, buy back stock and
create shareholder value,”
says Will Nasgovitz, CEO of
the Heartland Funds. CFRA
analyst Matthew Miller rec-
ommends NEWMONT GOLD-
CORP (NEM, $39), up 16% this
year. The company sells at
23 times earnings, com-
pared with 17 for the S&P


  1. It produces gold at a
    cost of $900 an ounce, how-
    ever, and if gold continues
    its rise, Newmont earnings
    should rise with it.
    Mutual funds and ETFs
    that invest in gold-mining
    stocks tend to have rela-
    tively high expense ratios.
    But one good fund choice
    is AMERICAN CENTURY GLOBAL
    GOLD (BGEIX), up 38.2% so far
    this year. It charges just
    0.67% a year in expenses.
    Elizabeth Xie and Yulin
    Long have been managing
    the fund since May 2016—
    not a long time, but Long
    has been at American Cen-
    tury since 2005, and Xie
    has been there since 2007.
    For those who prefer
    a lower-cost indexed ap-
    proach, VANECK VECTORS GOLD
    MINERS ETF (G DX , $ 29) gives you
    exposure to the sector for
    0.52%. The fund is up 39.2%
    this year.
    Gold and gold-mining
    stocks are definitely not
    core portfolio holdings.
    But if you’re looking for a
    bit of protection in uncer-
    tain times, adding a dollop
    of gold could make your
    portfolio shine a bit more
    brightly. ■


sions that the U.S. Mint
sells: They have a beautiful
finish but a high price tag.
At the moment, a one-ounce
American Eagle will set you
back about $1,500.
If you simply want gold
as a part of your portfolio,
consider a commodity gold
exchange-traded fund, such
as ISHARES GOLD TRUST (S Y MB O L
IAU, $14). The ETF buys and
sells physical gold, held by a
third-party custodian, and
charges 0.25% in annual ex-
penses. A slightly more ex-
pensive choice is SPDR GOLD
SHARES (GLD, $141), which also
holds physical gold and
charges 0.40%.
You might also buy shares
of gold-mining companies.
Mining stocks tend to rise
and fall more than the metal
itself because once the price
of gold covers production
costs, any increase is pure
profit. For example, con-
sider a company that pro-
duces gold for $1,000 an
ounce. If the price of gold
were to rise from $1,100 an
ounce to $1,200, a 9% in-
crease, the firm’s earnings
would double, from $100

easy investment for most
people to hold. “Gold is use-
ful in a portfolio in the same
way an F-35 is useful in na-
tional defense,” says Wil-
liam Bernstein, a financial
adviser and author of the
investing book Deep Risk.
“Very few people are
trained to use it properly.”
For example, gold swooned
from $850 an ounce in 1980
to $273 an ounce in 1998—a
string of losses that would
make many investors aban-
don a gold strategy. “It’s the
hardest asset to hold long
term in your portfolio,”
Bernstein says.

How to invest. If you want to
own the bullion itself, you
can buy one-ounce Ameri-
can Gold Eagle coins from a
dealer, although you’ll pay a
markup of 5% to 8%. (Check
the current spot gold rate
at websites such as www
.kitco.com before you buy to
see if you’re getting a good
price. It can pay to shop
around.) Skip collectible
coins, which can carry a big
premium for rarity. And
take a pass on the proof ver-

currencies, to get higher
returns. In July, President
Trump said he had not ruled
out a U.S. intervention in
world currency markets to
weaken the dollar further.
Gold prices thrive on
economic uncertainty, and
escalating trade tensions
have delivered that in
spades. “The wild card is
the trade war with China,”
says Lindsey Bell, invest-
ment strategist at CFRA.
“If that intensifies, it’s a
great environment for gold.”
Worries about the dollar
and global trade have
prompted foreign central
banks to increase their gold
reserves. Central banks,
mainly those in emerging
markets, bought 224.4 tons
of gold in the second quar-
ter of 2019.
What could derail the
rally in gold? Def lation is
one risk, although gold has
held up well in past periods
of falling prices. A larger
threat to gold is a global re-
cession during which con-
sumers, especially in China
and India, reduce their jew-
elry purchases. In the end,
gold’s value is largely psy-
chological—after all, it pays
no dividends and has no
earnings. Nevertheless, psy-
chology can be a powerful
price driver.
Many advisers recom-
mend as much as a 5% stake
in gold—partly as insurance
against financial catastro-
phe and partly as a portfolio
diversifier. Gold typically
does not move in tandem
with stocks, which can im-
prove your returns, adjusted
for risk, over long periods
of time.
But because gold is prone
to large drops, it isn’t an

Gold’s Role

PORTFOLIO DIVERSIFIER
The return on gold has trailed stock market gains over the past
25 years. But gold can add ballast when markets are turbulent.

As of August 9. SOURCES: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (FRED), Yahoo Finance.

Gold S&P 500 index

1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015 2019

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CONTACT THE AUTHOR AT JWAGGONER@
KIPLINGER.COM.
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