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Gold assets in biggest bullion ETF tumble since last year
Published on: Saturday, December 27, 2014
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INVESTORS in the world's biggest exchange-traded product backed by bullion sold the most gold in 18 months as the U.S. economic recovery cut demand for a haven.Holdings in the SPDR Gold Trust fell 1.6 per cent yesterday to 712.9 metric tons, the biggest drop since June 2013. Assets declined to the smallest since September 2008.

Bullion for immediate delivery is heading for the first back-to-back annual decline since 2000. A collapse in oil prices is curbing demand for the metal as an inflation hedge, while the Federal Reserve is moving closer to increasing interest rates. Gains for the dollar and U.S. equities have also made gold less attractive as an alternative asset.

"You've got all these factors conspiring against gold," Michael Cuggino, president and fund manager at Permanent Portfolio Family of Funds Inc. who helps oversee $7 billion, said in a telephone interview. "A certain number of investors are throwing in the towel."

Spot gold slid 0.2 per cent to $1,174.42 an ounce at 10:19 a.m. in New York today. Prices fell 2.3 per cent this year after a 28 per cent plunge in 2013, the most since 1981.

The U.S. economy expanded at a 5 per cent annualised rate in the third quarter, the biggest advance in 11 years, government figures showed yesterday.

Fed officials last week dropped a pledge to keep borrowing costs near zero per cent for a "considerable time," replacing it with a promise to be "patient," according to a statement.

The value of assets in the SPDR has dropped 13 per cent to about $27 billion this year after slumping 57 per cent in 2013, according to data. Holdings in gold-backed ETFs declined 8.7 per cent to 1,609.3 tons after a 33 per cent plunge last year, data show.

Gold has "held up pretty well considering other markets have been sold off pretty heavily," said Mark Pervan, head of industry economics and research at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Melbourne.

"You haven't seen as much selling in ETFs. Although it's not recovering, it's certainly nothing like what we saw last year."

Holdings in the SPDR Gold Trust in which billionaire John Paulson is the biggest investor have declined 11 per cent this year after plunging 41 per cent in 2013.

While investors have been selling, some countries have bought gold after reducing holdings for about two decades from the late 1980s. Central banks globally will probably purchase 400 tons to 500 tons this year, the World Gold Council says.

Russian reserves climbed for an eighth month in November to about 1,187.5 tons, the highest in at least two decades, according to International Monetary Fund data.

Brent crude oil tumbled 46 per cent in 2014 and West Texas Intermediate fell 42 per cent as supplies climbed. The Bloomberg Commodity Index of 22 components dropped 15 per cent to head for a fourth straight annual loss.

While the stronger dollar has made gold less appealing for American buyers, physical demand in India and China can help support prices, Cuggino said.

In the U.S., there's a "reallocation trade happening" with investors switching out of gold and into equities, he said.

Yesterday's better-than-estimated report on the U.S. economy sent benchmark stock gauges to record highs.

The collapse in crude and the longest commodity slump in at least a generation means that instead of the surge in consumer prices that gold buyers have been expecting for much of the past decade, the U.S. is "dis-inflating," according to Bill Gross, who used to run the world's biggest bond fund.

Gold surged 70 per cent from December 2008 to June 2011 as central banks increased money supply on an unprecedented scale, spurring concerns that inflation would accelerate.

Bullion generally offers investors returns only through price gains.





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