How to Invest in Gold
The following are some of the media and how to invest in gold :
1. Bars
1 troy ounce (31 g) gold bar with
certificate
The most traditional
way of investing in gold is by buying bullion gold bars.
In some countries, like Canada, Argentina, Austria, Liechtenstein and Switzerland,
these can easily be bought or sold at the major banks. Alternatively, there are
bullion dealers that provide the same service. Bars are available in various
sizes. For example in Europe, Good Delivery
bars are approximately 400 troy ounces (12 kg). 1 kilogram (32 ozt)
are also popular, although many other weights exist, such as the 10oz, 1oz,
10 g, 100 g, 1 kg, 1 Tael, and 1 Tola.
Bars generally carry lower price premiums than gold bullion
coins. However larger bars carry an increased risk of forgery due to their less
stringent parameters for appearance. While bullion coins can be easily weighed
and measured against known values, most bars cannot, and gold buyers often have
bars re-assayed. Larger bars also have a greater volume
in which to create a partial forgery using a tungsten-filled
cavity, which may not be revealed by an assay.
One way of avoiding such a scam is to buy and hold
gold bars that are held within the London bullion market (LBMA) “chain of
custody” and store the gold in a LBMA recognized vault. The gold bullion held
within the LBMA recognized vaults can be bought and sold easily. If it is
removed from the vaults and stored outside of the chain of integrity, for
example stored at home or in a private vault, the bar will have to be
re-assayed before it can be returned to the LBMA chain. This process is
described under the LBMA's "Good Delivery Rules".
The LBMA includes in this "traceable chain of
custody" refiners as well as vaults. Both have to meet their strict
guidelines. Bullion products from these trusted refiners are traded at face
value by LBMA members without assay testing. By buying bullion from an LBMA
member dealer and storing it in an LBMA recognized vault, customers avoid the
need of re-assaying or the inconvenience in time and expense it would cost.[41]
Efforts
to combat gold bar counterfeiting include kinebars
which employ a unique holographic technology and are manufactured by the
Argor-Heraeus refinery in Switzerland.
2. Coins
The faces of a Krugerrand,
the most common gold bullion coin.
Gold coins are a common way of owning gold. Bullion coins
are priced according to their fine weight, plus a small premium based on supply and
demand (as opposed to numismatic
gold coins which are priced mainly by supply and demand based on rarity and
condition).
The Krugerrand is the most widely-held gold bullion coin, with
46,000,000 troy ounces (1,400 tonnes) in circulation. Other common gold
bullion coins include the Australian Gold Nugget (Kangaroo),
Austrian Philharmoniker (Philharmonic),
Austrian 100 Corona, Canadian Gold Maple Leaf, Chinese Gold Panda, Malaysian
Kijang Emas, French
Napoleon or Louis d'Or, Mexican Gold
50 Peso, British Sovereign, American Gold Eagle, and American Buffalo.
Coins may be purchased from a variety of dealers both large
and small. Fake gold coins are not uncommon, and are usually made of
gold-plated lead.
3. Exchange-traded products (ETPs)
Gold exchange-traded products may include ETFs, ETNs, and CEFs
which are traded like shares on the major stock exchanges. The first gold ETF, Gold Bullion Securities (ticker symbol
"GOLD"), was launched in March 2003 on the Australian Stock Exchange, and originally
represented exactly 0.1 troy ounces (3.1 g) of gold. As of November 2010, SPDR Gold
Shares is the second-largest exchange-traded fund (ETF) in the world by
market capitalization.
Gold ETPs represent an easy way to gain exposure to the gold
price, without the inconvenience of storing physical bars. However
exchange-traded gold instruments, even those which hold physical gold for the
benefit of the investor, carry risks beyond those inherent in the precious
metal itself. For example the most popular gold ETP (GLD) has been widely
criticized, and even compared with mortgage-backed securities, due to
features of its complex structure.
Typically a small commission is charged for trading in gold
ETPs and a small annual storage fee is charged. The annual expenses of the fund
such as storage, insurance, and management fees are charged by selling a small
amount of gold represented by each certificate, so the amount of gold in each
certificate will gradually decline over time.
Exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, are
investment companies that are legally classified as open-end companies or Unit Investment Trusts (UITs), but that
differ from traditional open-end companies and UITs. The main differences are
that ETFs do not sell directly to investors and they issue their shares in what
are called "Creation Units" (large blocks such as blocks of 50,000
shares). Also, the Creation Units may not be purchased with cash but a basket
of securities that mirrors the ETF's portfolio. Usually, the Creation Units are
split up and re-sold on a secondary market.
ETF shares can be sold in basically two ways. The investors
can sell the individual shares to other investors, or they can sell the
Creation Units back to the ETF. In addition, ETFs generally redeem Creation
Units by giving investors the securities that comprise the portfolio instead of
cash. Because of the limited redeemability of ETF shares, ETFs are not
considered to be and may not call themselves mutual funds.
4. Certificates
Gold certificates allow gold investors to avoid
the risks
and costs associated with the transfer and storage of physical bullion (such as
theft, large bid-offer spread, and metallurgical assay costs) by taking on a
different set of risks and costs associated with the certificate itself (such
as commissions, storage fees, and various types of credit risk).
Banks may issue gold certificates for gold which is allocated
(fully reserved) or unallocated (pooled). Unallocated gold certificates
are a form of fractional reserve banking and do not
guarantee an equal exchange for metal in the event of a run
on the issuing bank's gold on deposit. Allocated gold certificates should be
correlated with specific numbered bars, although it is difficult to determine
whether a bank is improperly allocating a single bar to more than one party.
The first paper bank notes were gold
certificates. They were first issued in the 17th century when they
were used by goldsmiths in England and the Netherlands
for customers who kept deposits of gold bullion in their vault for
safe-keeping. Two centuries later, the gold certificates began being issued in
the United States when the US Treasury issued such certificates that could be
exchanged for gold. The United States Government first authorized the use of
the gold certificates in 1863. In the early 1930s the US Government restricted
the private gold ownership in the United States and therefore, the gold
certificates stopped circulating as money (this restriction was reversed on
January 1, 1975). Nowadays, gold certificates are still issued by gold pool
programs in Australia
and the United States, as well as by banks in Germany
and Switzerland.
5. Accounts
Many types of gold "accounts" are available.
Different accounts impose varying types of intermediation between the client
and their gold. One of the most important differences between accounts is
whether the gold is held on an allocated (fully reserved) or unallocated
(pooled) basis. Unallocated gold accounts are a form of fractional reserve banking and do not
guarantee an equal exchange for metal in the event of a run
on the issuer's gold on deposit.
Another major difference is the strength of the account
holder's claim on the gold, in the event that the account administrator faces
gold-denominated liabilities (due to a short
or naked short position in gold for example), asset
forfeiture, or bankruptcy.
Many banks offer gold accounts where gold can be instantly
bought or sold just like any foreign currency on a fractional reserve basis. Swiss banks
offer similar service on a fully allocated basis. Pool accounts, such as those
offered by Kitco,
facilitate highly liquid but unallocated claims on gold owned by the company. Digital gold currency systems operate like
pool accounts and additionally allow the direct transfer of fungible gold
between members of the service. BullionVault,
for example, allows clients to create a bailment
on allocated (non-fungible) gold, which becomes the legal property of the
buyer.
6.
Derivatives, CFDs and spread betting
Derivatives, such as gold forwards,
futures
and options, currently trade on various exchanges
around the world and over-the-counter (OTC) directly in the
private market. In the U.S., gold futures are primarily traded on the New York
Commodities Exchange (COMEX)
and Euronext.liffe.
In India,
gold futures are traded on the National Commodity and Derivatives
Exchange (NCDEX) and Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX).
As of 2009 holders of COMEX gold futures have experienced
problems taking delivery of their metal. Along with chronic delivery delays,
some investors have received delivery of bars not matching their contract in
serial number and weight. The delays cannot be easily explained by slow
warehouse movements, as the daily reports of these movements show little
activity. Because of these problems, there are concerns that COMEX may not have
the gold inventory to back its existing warehouse receipts.
Firms such as Cantor Index,
CMC Markets,
IG Index
and City Index, all from the UK, provide contract for difference (CFD) or spread bets on the price of gold.
7. Mining companies
These do not represent gold at all, but rather are shares in gold mining companies. If
the gold price rises, the profits of the gold mining company could be expected
to rise and as a result the share price may rise. However, there are many
factors to take into account and it is not always the case that a share price
will rise when the gold price increases. Mines are commercial enterprises and
subject to problems such as flooding, subsidence and structural failure, as well as mismanagement,
theft and corruption. Such factors can lower the share prices of mining
companies.
The price of gold bullion is volatile, but unhedged gold
shares and funds are regarded as even higher risk and even more volatile. This
additional volatility is due to the inherent leverage in the mining sector.
For example, if you own a share in a gold mine where the costs of production
are $300 per ounce and the price of gold is $600, the mine's profit margin
will be $300. A 10% increase in the gold price to $660 per ounce will push that
margin up to $360, which represents a 20% increase in the mine's profitability,
and potentially a 20% increase in the share price. Furthermore, at higher
prices, more ounces of gold become economically viable to mines, enabling
companies to add to their reserves. Conversely, share movements also amplify
falls in the gold price. For example, a 10% fall in the gold price to $540 will
decrease that margin to $240, which represents a 20% fall in the mine's
profitability, and potentially a 20% decrease in the share price.
To reduce this volatility some gold mining companies hedge
the gold price up to 18 months in advance. This provides the mining company and
investors with less exposure to short term gold price fluctuations, but reduces
returns when the gold price is rising.
- I want to conclude that from the seven media and how to invest in gold, gold investing most secure and cost the least is the way Certificates because Gold certificates allow gold investors to avoid the risks and costs associated with the transfer and storage of physical bullion (such as theft, large bid-offer spread, and metallurgical assay costs) by taking on a different set of risks and costs associated with the certificate itself (such as commissions, storage fees, and various types of credit risk).
- Wikipedia.com/golg-investmenREF : http://nadytha.com/business/business-opportunities-in-gold-investment.html
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