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Why gold is dazzling investors
The Straits Times
|October 24, 2024
Financial fears and geopolitical tremors combine to great effect.
-
 
 Less than 2km from Singapore's luxurious Changi Airport sits a rather less glamorous business park. Residents of the industrial estate include freight and logistics firms, as well as the back offices of several banks. One building is a little different, however. Behind a glossy onyx facade, layers of security and imposing steel doors, sits more than US$1 billion (S$1.3 billion) in gold, silver and other treasures. Reserve SG hosts dozens of private vaults, thousands of safe deposit boxes and a cavernous storage room where precious metals sit on shelves rising three storeys above the ground.
After four years of retrofitting, the complex is almost complete.
Its grand opening will come at an opportune moment: Gold is in the midst of an extraordinary renaissance. Over the past year, investors have piled into the metal, driving its price up by 38 per cent to over US$2,700 per troy ounce - a record high. The buzz has reached unusual places: Gold bars have hit the shelves of Costco, an American retailer, and CU, a South Korean convenience-store chain, as the resurgence of inflation and fears of war drive consumer enthusiasm. Central bankers are also getting involved, as financial fragmentation increases appetite for an ancient asset. The world has entered a new golden age.
Professional investors are often scornful of precious metals, for good reason. Gold produces no income. Mr Warren Buffett, one such investor, says that bets on gold are made by those who fear other assets, and believes that the ranks of the fearful will expand.
Among American institutional investors managing more than US$100 million in assets, only a quarter report owning shares in gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs), according to researchers Dirk Baur and Lai Hoang of the University of Western Australia.
Only 1.5 per cent of such firms' assets are in gold. All this helps explain why holdings in gold ETFs have failed to rise, even as the price of the metal has climbed.
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