Precious Metals ETFs: A Less Risky Way To Maintain Purchasing Power?
21 October 2009 at 11:22 am by Gary Gordon
The worldwide solution to fight deflation is/was government stimulus spending and coordinated rate decreases. Some world powers spent more than others and some spent less intelligently than others. In addition, different central banks cut rates more drastically than their counterparts.
Regardless of political camp or economic orientation, there’s near unanimity that the dramatic efforts by the U.S. government are responsible for significant deterioration in the value and credibility of the U.S. dollar. (Review the reasons that a weak dollar has had advantages as well as disadvantages.) Yet one thing that any investor must consider going forward are ways to hedge against inflationary pressures that stem directly from less valuable dollars in circulation.
The most common guidance are lower risk, inflation-protected securities. Yet the ever-popular iShares TIPS Bond (TIP) relies on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) that always seems to underestimate inflation in the real world. For that reason alone, TIP may have trouble keeping up with actual inflation… and thereby struggle to maintain true purchasing power.
Foreign stocks, particularly emerging market stocks, may be a more potent fighter against the erosion of purchasing power. In fact, the total return that emanates from share price appreciation, dividend yield and foreign currency gains can add generously to a portfolio.
There is one catch, however. For all the “talk” about decoupling, the worldwide linkages in financial markets have demonstrated that U.S. stocks probably wouldn’t collapse in a vacuum; that is, we’d likely see significant foreign stock declines as well.
So when it comes to reasonable-risk returns to overcome inflation/dollar devaluation, one should not ignore precious metals. Even with gold at $1000+ an ounce… even with remarkable gains for silver, platinum and the precious metal combo funds… there’s still plenty of reason to claim a stake.
For starters, the risk of owning gold has frequently been overstated; financial planners, pension committees and “wannabes” often declare that gold is far too risky for clients/beneficiaries.
However, gold has closed higher every year in the 21st century. Its worst drawdown of -30% in 2008’s all-asset liquidation is still less than any country’s stock benchmark’s worst drawdown. And the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) currently carries a Risk Grade of 76… less than the S&P 500’s SPY grade of 83.
I hardly consider myself a gold bug; that said, I’ll probably be bullish on the yellow metal until one or two things occur. One, if my fellow countrymen start panning for gold in their local streams or mining in their backyards, that’d be bearish. (Note: Consider how backyard drilling started hitting headlines when oil hit $150.) Second, if gold falls below a 200-day moving average, I’d be quite cognizant of the metal’s historical downside (drawdown).

Here are 5 ways to invest in the potential success of precious metal ETFs, sorted by risk:
| 5 ETFs For Precious Metal Investors | ||||||
| Risk Grade | YTD % (through 10/16) | |||||
| SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) | 76 | 19.3% | ||||
| PowerShares DP Precious Metals (DBP) | 88 | 24.1% | ||||
| iShares Silver Trust (SLV) | 150 | 53.4% | ||||
| ProShares Ultra Gold (UGL) | 151 | 32.7% | ||||
| Market Vectors Gold Miners (GDX) | 208 | 42.8% | ||||
If you’d like to learn more about ETF investing… then tune into “In the Money With Gary Gordon.” You can listen to the show “LIVE”, via podcast or on your iPod.
Disclosure Statement: ETF Expert is a web log (”blog”) that makes the world of ETFs easier to understand. Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC, may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds and/or index funds mentioned above. Investors who are interested in money management services may visit the Pacific Park Financial, Inc. web site.
Tags | "etf metals", "etf precious metal", "etfs gold", "etfs silver", "gold and etfs", Silver ETFs






















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