SINGAPORE/HONG KONG (July 25, 2013): Asian investors
are keeping faith in gold funds, taking in their stride a stunning
plunge in the price of the metal over the past few months, as paper gold
looks to be finding a stronger foothold in the region.
Source from (The Sun Daily): http://www.thesundaily.my/news/780577
Published: July 26, 2013
In sharp contrast to Western markets, where investors made a beeline
to exit gold fund investments, a net US$33.5 million was pumped into
Asian gold and precious metals miners' funds in the three months to
June, according to data from fund tracker Lipper and Reuters
calculations.
Similar funds in the West saw net outflows of about US$18 billion, or
about 11% of their end-March assets under management, in the same
period, according to the Lipper data.
The conflicting responses to the 20% fall in gold prices this year
show a growing appetite for gold funds in Asia and provide hope for a
fledgling funds industry that has struggled to attract investors.
It also shows the limited presence of speculators and hedge funds, who dominate the Western market for gold funds.
"It's more about the mentality," said William Chow, managing director
of Value Partners Group's exchange-traded fund (ETF) business. "Asian
risk appetite for gold is more stable than that of US investors."
The firm runs the biggest Hong Kong-domiciled gold ETF, which held gold worth about US$100 million at end-June.
Asia's demand for physical bullion is unparalleled, from buying jewellery for weddings to storing coins under the bed.
Gold – coming off 12 years of gains – is headed for its worst annual
performance since 1997 on worries global central banks will withdraw
their easy-money policies of the past few years, making the metal less
compelling for investors.
The precious metal fell sharply in April, down over US$200 an ounce
in two days, and then again in June when it fell 15% over nine sessions.
India's SBI Gold Exchange Traded Scheme and Japan's Nomura Gold
Futures Fund were among funds that saw inflows last quarter, data from
Lipper, a Thomson Reuters company, showed.
"Gold is not just considered an investment tool in Asia, it is also
seen as a luxury. So when the price drops, people tend to accumulate
more," said Tanawat Roongtanapirom, a fund manager at Kasikorn Asset
Management, which runs the US$591 million K Gold, Asia's biggest gold
fund.
Despite the inflows, Asia remains a far smaller market for gold funds
compared with the US, where top hedge fund managers such as John
Paulson of Paulson & Co Inc, David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital
Management and Dan Loeb of Third Point LLC have significant exposure to
the metal.
Gold-backed ETFs are a relatively new concept in Asia.
China, the second-biggest gold buyer, only recently approved the
launch of its first two gold ETFs. The funds raised a total of 1.6
billion yuan (US$261 million) in their initial funding round, which was
below expectations.
And in top gold buyer India, annual consumption was about 860 tonnes
in 2012, according to the World Gold Council. But the 14 gold ETFs there
hold less than 40 tonnes of the metal in all.
"The trend of shifting from physical to gold ETFs is just beginning," said Kasikorn's Roongtanapirom.
Siyi Lim, an ETF analyst at OCBC Investment Research in Singapore,
said individual investors are becoming more aware of the different gold
products in the market.
"Increasingly, we see investors turning to ETFs as a way to gain
immediate access to entry and exit," said Lim. "Demand is particularly
strong in Hong Kong, Macau and India." – Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment