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While most investors seem satisfied using the shares of mining companies as
high-beta substitutes for the metal, more and more individuals are becoming
interested in owning some physical gold itself. Unfortunately, most investors
don't know how best to buy and store the precious metal.
It used to be that investors would simply visit the corner coin shop to buy
gold bullion, but finding a precious metals dealer who would stand by his quoted
price in a volatile market wasn't always a sure thing. More importantly, there
is a challenge faced by anyone wanting to buy more than a few one-ounce coins:
storage. Unless one is comfortable burying gold in the backyard, there is always
a cost in securely storing bullion.
Thankfully, products that combine the purchase and storage of physical gold
have been improving dramatically, with one new entrant, bullionvault.com, providing
a particularly attractive alternative. Here's how such offerings have evolved:
Exchange-Traded Gold Choices
Many investors seem to think that the ability to purchase physical metal through
an exchange-traded vehicle arrived only in late 2004 via GLD, the World Gold
Council's ETF that holds gold bullion through intermediaries. Gold bugs know,
however, that for nearly 20 years U.S. investors have had access to Canada's
Central Fund (AMEX symbol: CEF).
While the Central Fund is similar to the upstart GLD in that it also holds
gold bullion (and silver) in some form of allocated storage, unlike GLD it
behaves like a traditional closed-end fund, sometimes trading at a big premium
or discount to its own net asset value depending on whether gold is in or out
of favor. When trading at a significant discount, this is an interesting stock
to consider; today's premium of almost 10%, however, suggests gold can be had
much more inexpensively elsewhere, certainly in GLD if looking only for an
exchange-traded vehicle.
Where both of the above exchange-traded vehicles fall short, though, is in
the area of convertibility. Part of the reason for buying a physical gold product
is the potential to take delivery in the future. CEF offers no such convertibility
and GLD only allows it for purchases of 100,000 shares - nearly a $5.5MM investment
at today's prices.
Perhaps convenient for trading, the ETF products don't measure up as solutions
for those who might wish to one day take hold of their shiny treasure.
Internet Offerings
A few web-based solutions combine the purchase and storage of bullion in a
manner similar to the above ETF's, yet one has emerged to clearly stand out
as the best overall online product: BullionVault.
And don't just take my word for it. In a recent email to readers, one writer
at the acclaimed Agora Publishing called it, "...the most exciting development
in the gold market I've ever witnessed." That same writer went on to say, "Bullion
Vault enables you to trade the purest gold at the tiniest spreads - with no
delivery charges, minimal insurance fees, and storage costs to make your local
bank blush." High praise, indeed.
Like its competitors, a simple online application also opens your account.
Here, however, fees are wafer thin - the maximum sales charge is only .8% -
eight-tenths of one percent - with significant discounts beginning at only
$30,000 invested. To highlight the contrast: the lowest fees of BV's
closest competitor are greater than the highest rate charged by Bullion
Vault! Further, there is no minimum dollar amount to open an account and gold
can be fabricated and delivered for a fee to investors of all sizes.
How can Bullion Vault afford to charge so little? It has to do with its mission:
to become a deep, round-the-clock market for physical gold trading. With such
low fees, it explicitly intends to serve as a market for active traders of
bullion, to the great cost benefit of the long-term investor. Bids and offers,
which are visible at all times on the company's website, are placed there by
Bullion Vault clients (and quoted prices are "firm"). The result has been increasingly
tight spreads (often less than $1, which is unreal), lowering the cost of acquisition.
Indeed, when I first looked at Bullion Vault a year ago I was immediately
put off by trading spreads you could drive a truck through. When I re-discovered
the product late last year, I was amazed to see the dramatic tightening of
those spreads, a direct result of increased liquidity that has materialized
from its dramatic growth. Haven't heard much about it yet? You will.
Even those who only want trading exposure to gold without any desire to take
possession should look beyond the exchange-traded GLD and its pricey .40% annual
expense ratio. Bullion's Vault's annual fee for storage and insurance, by comparison,
is only .12%, less than one-third that of GLD.
Despite the fact that physical gold products have become increasingly attractive
in recent years, traders, investors and competitors alike will find BullionVault.com
a very tough act to follow.
*In looking for other ways to diversify some assets away from the U.S. Dollar,
investors continue to show a high degree of interest in Canadian Royalty Trusts.
We at Delta Global have exclusively commissioned an investor's guide by perhaps
the leading expert on the sector, Roger Conrad, available for FREE here: http://www.deltaga.com/reportForm.asp?rep=2
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