In my experience if you’re discussing UK Equities as part of an investment portfolio its validity is unlikely to be challenged and any response is likely to be fairly passive. A typical response might be something like what percentage allocation do you have. If you say to somebody that you hold Gold then the responses can be far more variable. At the extreme they can range from I don’t believe in Gold as an investment as it doesn’t pay a dividend because it just sits there looking shiny to I’m 100% invested in Gold, guns, ammo and tinned beans.
Within my own portfolio I target a holding of 5%. So why do I hold gold? It’s for the same reason that I buy property or gilts on top of my equities. To quote Bernstein’s The Intelligent Asset Allocator it’s simply because ‘Dividing your portfolio between assets with uncorrelated results increases return while decreasing risk’ which is a key concept within Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT). Bernstein continues with ‘Mixing assets with uncorrelated returns reduces risk, because when one of the assets is zigging, it is likely that the other is zagging.’ The keyword in the first quote is uncorrelated. In the book he works up some examples to validate these statements.
Let’s run a simple analysis looking to see if we can find an example of gold being uncorrelated with another asset class.
My first chart shows how the Monthly Gold Price in Pounds Sterling (£’s) has changed since 1979. Over the past year its Price has fallen by 0.6%. We looked in detail at the FTSE100 last week so let’s use that as a different asset comparator as that dataset is up to date. Over the past year the Price of the FTSE100 has risen 7.0%.
Diverting quickly for completeness, as I always like to show charts in Real terms to remove the emotion that comes with the unit of measure continually being devalued by inflation, let me quickly also show the Real Gold Price in Pounds.
Within my own portfolio I target a holding of 5%. So why do I hold gold? It’s for the same reason that I buy property or gilts on top of my equities. To quote Bernstein’s The Intelligent Asset Allocator it’s simply because ‘Dividing your portfolio between assets with uncorrelated results increases return while decreasing risk’ which is a key concept within Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT). Bernstein continues with ‘Mixing assets with uncorrelated returns reduces risk, because when one of the assets is zigging, it is likely that the other is zagging.’ The keyword in the first quote is uncorrelated. In the book he works up some examples to validate these statements.
Let’s run a simple analysis looking to see if we can find an example of gold being uncorrelated with another asset class.
My first chart shows how the Monthly Gold Price in Pounds Sterling (£’s) has changed since 1979. Over the past year its Price has fallen by 0.6%. We looked in detail at the FTSE100 last week so let’s use that as a different asset comparator as that dataset is up to date. Over the past year the Price of the FTSE100 has risen 7.0%.
Click to enlarge
Diverting quickly for completeness, as I always like to show charts in Real terms to remove the emotion that comes with the unit of measure continually being devalued by inflation, let me quickly also show the Real Gold Price in Pounds.
Click to enlarge