Further to Paulson's new Gold Fund
posted on
Nov 21, 2009 11:18AM
San Gold Corporation - one of Canada's most exciting new exploration companies and gold producers.
One of the biggest investors is placing a huge new bet on gold. - WSJ
Because I think this development is so important, I'm running the Financial Time's article that appeared today. I think that many funds will be copying Paulson on gold -- Russell.
Paulson starts gold fund amid record prices
By Gregory Meyer and Henny Sender in New York
Funds run by the company now have more than a tenth of their assets in gold, a person familiar with its investments said. John Paulson, its billionaire founder, is seeding the new fund with $250m of his own money to offer investors a more concentrated exposure to gold. It will focus on shares and derivatives of mining companies rather than the physical commodity, the person said.
Mr Paulson has offered investors an option to have a gold share class for the past year and is a heavy user of gold exchange-traded funds to hedge.
As of September 30, the company was the largest single holder of the $40.6bn SPDR Gold ETF, with 8.6 per cent of outstanding shares, according to Bloomberg data. It also owned shares in the gold miners AngloGold Ashanti and Kinross Gold.
The move comes as central banks have kept interest rates near zero, luring investors into riskier assets such as emerging-market stocks and weakening the dollar. Investors worried about currency risks have bought gold as a stable store of value. Gold hit an all-time high yesterday, above $1,150 an ounce.
Other hedge fund managers attracted to gold have included David Einhorn, founder of the hedge fund Greenlight Capital who came under the spotlight last year for the short-selling of shares in Lehman Brothers after arguing the bank did not have enough capital to offset exposure to falling property prices.
The fund manager Tudor Investment said in a letter last month that a "Great Liquidity Race" could benefit gold. Paul Tudor Jones, its chairman, wrote: "I have never been a gold bug. It is just an asset that, like everything else in life, has its time and place. And now is that time."
Central banks have also been buying gold as the value of their dollar reserves dwindles. India, Sri Lanka and Mauritius have been purchasing gold. China revealed that its gold reserves had nearly doubled over the past five years.
"The fact that the dollar keeps stumbling, and also, more importantly, that there are concerns about the long-term impact of quantitative easing and a general commodities rally, all paint a picture that is pretty supportive of gold prices," said James Steel, precious metals analyst at HSBC in New York. "Waiting for a substantial correction in this market is like waiting for Godot."
The new Paulson fund was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.