BLBG:Gold 22% Rally To Record Seen By Eric Sprott: Commodities
Gold will climb to a record by yearend as the global economy slows from the weight of too much debt, says Eric Sprott, the founder and chairman of Canadian fund manager Sprott Inc. (SII)
âI just canât imagine the demand for gold is going down,â he said in a July 9 interview at Bloombergâs Toronto office. âI donât personally see a solution to the problem that weâre in, the financial leveraging issue that we all have where everybody wants to shed debt and thereâs no buyers.â
Sprottâs company manages funds investing mainly in gold, silver, and precious-metals equities. He expects bullion will rise as investors seek the safest assets while governments spend to stimulate their economies, increasing chances that inflation will accelerate.
Gold, which had advanced for 11 successive years, is almost unchanged so far in 2012. Itâs 18 percent lower than the record $1,923.70 an ounce traded on Sept. 6 in New York after investors favored buying the dollar amid Europeâs escalating debt crisis.
The metal âshould go to new highs before yearend, that would be my guess,â said Sprott, 67. âGold has blown away every financial market in the world since 2000, letâs not forget that.â
Rallying to a record would mean gold climbing at least 22 percent from yesterdayâs close on the Comex in New York, where bullion for August delivery fell 0.3 percent to $1,575.70 an ounce. Futures gained 2.4 percent in 2012 through June, the smallest first-half increase since 2007. The August-delivery contract traded at $1,571.30 an ounce today.
âFundamental Problemâ
Sprott declined to make a specific price prediction. Future highs are âindefinableâ because they will depend on decisions by policymakers, he said.
Sprott has previously made predictions that were accurate, or largely so. He said in May 2011 that gold might rise to $2,000 that year. In March 2008 he said banking stocks would collapse. Bear Stearns Cos. was sold to JPMorgan Chase & Co. later that month and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for bankruptcy in September.
Governments including the U.S. donât have the resources to meet their obligations, Sprott said.
âWe have a fundamental problem in the sovereign and banking system in the world,â Sprott said. âProbably nobody has any conception of how bad it is.â
Minsky Moment
Central banks can either print money, which would help lenders, or âdeal with the Minsky moment,â he said. The term was named after the late U.S. economist Hyman Minsky, whose Financial Instability Hypothesis argues that capitalist economies first trigger waves of credit expansion and asset inflation and then credit contraction and asset deflation.
âMinsky said that if you expand your economy by increasing debt, there comes a point where the productive engine canât deal with the debt,â Sprott said. âIâve thought that there will be many, many Minsky moments for many banks and countries.â
Sprott is a qualified accountant who started his investment career as an analyst at Merrill Lynch & Co. He founded his current company before selling Sprott Securities, now Cormark Securities Inc., to its employees in 2002. He owns 55 percent of Sprott Inc. according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
His company, which also offers wealth-management and consulting services, had C$9.7 billion ($9.5 billion) under management as of March 31, mostly through its Sprott Asset Management unit.
Gold Equities
Sprott Inc. rose 0.2 percent to C$4.85 in Toronto yesterday, valuing it at C$822.8 million. The company has declined 52 percent since its May 2008 initial public offering.
Sprott has lauded gold and gold stocks since at least 2001. The company began offering its own products for investors who want to own bullion in March 2009. Sprott Inc.âs Sprott Hedge Fund has returned about 391 percent since its inception in 2000, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Gold equities, which have lagged behind gains in the metal, will probably âdo wellâ when gold prices rise, Sprott said. The stocks âcanât get a sustained recovery until gold has a sustained recovery,â he said.
The NYSE Arca Gold BUGS (HUI) Index, which comprises 16 gold mining companies, has fallen 24 percent in the past 12 months, compared with a 1.7 percent rise in gold in New York. Toronto- based Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX) and Vancouver-based Goldcorp Inc. (G), the worldâs two most valuable miners of the metal, have dropped 20 percent and 31 percent respectively in the period.
Gold Standard
To be sure, gold-mine production is increasing, which will be negative for prices, said Pawel Rajszel, a Toronto-based investment analyst at Veritas Investment Research.
âSupply is growing faster than demand can keep up with, and as a result you are going to see prices slowly but gradually fall,â Rajszel said. âObviously thereâs a bunch of short-term fluctuations that can happen, but I think over the long term you will see gold prices fall.â
The metal averaged $1,613 in the second quarter. It will average $1,721 in the third quarter and $1,802 in the fourth, according to the average of 23 analystsâ estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
The debt crisis âshould be incredible for gold,â said Sprott. He said the world may eventually return to the gold standard.
âUltimately, if thereâs a currency crisis, which one could argue we are in the throes of it right now, how do sovereigns and banks back things up? What do you back it up with?â he said. âI can imagine that the most logical thing is gold.â
To contact the reporter on this story: Liezel Hill in Toronto at lhill30@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net