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Charles Oliver: Gold
Headed to $2,000 in Two Years
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Source: Brian Sylvester of The Gold
Report 6/04/2010
Sprott Asset Management's Charles Oliver not only
makes some bold predictions in this exclusive interview with The Gold
Report, he backs them up. "I expect gold to be at $2,000 roughly
two years from today. . .if I'm wrong I'll shave the hair off my
head," Oliver says. As an unwavering believer in the yellow metal,
Oliver is well positioned as co-manager of several Sprott investment funds,
some of which hold bullion. One of those—Sprott's Gold and Precious
Minerals Fund—climbed 114% in 2009, and claimed the 2010 Lipper Fund
Award for Best Fund Over One Year in the precious metals category. Oliver
shares some of the secrets of his success in this one-on-one
interview.
The Gold
Report: What's your view on the European bailout?
Charles
Oliver: The big problem that's going on is that there's too much
leverage, too much debt, and people spending beyond their means. We had the
financial crisis in 2008; the banks were bailed out by the governments, and
now we see that the governments are in trouble because they've been
spending too much and not living within their means. I really don't like
the idea of bailing out everybody who breaks the rules. In the case of
Greece, as part of the European Union, it was supposed to have a deficit
that was less than 3% of its GDP, as part of the rules for getting in. Its
deficit is now north of 13%, and it looks like it's going to get bailed
out. One of the big problems with bailouts is that other countries see that
and say, "You know what? We can be irresponsible, we can keep on
spending, and, if we get into trouble, somebody else is going to come and
bail us out." I really have some concern about the moral hazards that
these bailouts have toward future spending and the way the countries go
about their business.
TGR: How
would you solve the problem?
CO: You
ultimately have to cut back on your spending; you have to increase taxes.
There is going to be pain and suffering. The Germans have been quite
aggressive in telling the Greeks they don't want to bail them out. In
Germany, people retire at the age of 65, and, in Greece, my understanding
is people retire at 53. The German people really get incensed when they
think that they're going to bail out somebody so they can retire at the age
of 53 while they're still working at 65.
TGR: Do you
think the euro will survive?
CO: I think
the euro survives; I was very skeptical when it first came into being
because it's very tough to have a whole different collection of countries
living under one set of rules. Having said that, I think they've been very
successful over the last decade. Some principles were put in place for the
euro, like running a deficit that is less than 3% of GDP. When people
drafted that rule, there was a reason, and the reason was that if you have
a deficit below 3% of GDP, you are going to be able to pay back your debts.
Things like that make the euro a very good currency to have. Also, when you
look at Europe, there's a great opportunity to trade and do business. By
having the euro, you really facilitate easier transactions.
TGR: The bailout
provides a stopgap solution for the European Union. In the United States
you have "green shoots" economic data, and there's still economic
growth coming from China and India. There are lots of positive signs that
the global economy is heading in the right direction. Nonetheless, we're
seeing quite a bit of volatility in the markets. Why is this
happening?
CO: There are
positive signs, but if you dig behind the data, they're not nearly as
positive as one might think. Again, if we look at this European bailout, I
think that the issues still exist. If you look at Spain, it has a deficit
of around 11% of GDP—Portugal, the U.K., all these countries are
running big deficits. I might add, too, that the United States, it is going
to have a deficit of around $1.6 trillion on a GDP of $14 trillion, which
means that the U.S. is also running a very large budget deficit. If you
look at a lot of the green shoots data out of the U.S., some of the growth
numbers have been funded by fiscal stimulus programs—government
spending—and that is basically because they're running very large
deficits.
If the U.S. was to live within its means, let's say with
deficits of less than 3% of GDP, then I would say if you looked at what the
GDP numbers are without the government spending, they wouldn't look all
that good.
Looking at other countries around the world, such as
China, I am a big long-term believer that China is going to have
substantially higher growth than the U.S. and other advanced countries.
Having said that, it looks like they're sort of pulling back right now;
their stock market is down around 20%, so sort of entering a bear market.
There are many risks when you look behind some of the finer details.
TGR: The Sprott Gold and
Precious Metals Fund received the 2010 Lipper Fund Award for Best Fund Over
One Year in the precious metals category; it was up 114% in 2009.
Congratulations! With that in mind, what are your short- and longer-term
projections for gold?
CO: My longer-term
projection, which I have had for the last two years, is that I expect gold
to be at $2,000 roughly two years from today. On many occasions, on TV and
such, I have stated that if I'm wrong I'll shave the hair off my head; so,
I firmly believe that. All the fundamentals point to a much higher gold
price. The only question is, when?
In the short term, I am very optimistic. I'm hearing about
new fiscal stimulus programs out of the U.S. I think there's a call for a
mini-stimulus program, which again means high deficits continuing into the
future, more printing of money, quantitative easing, and other such things.
Everything looks really good for the gold price in the short term. The only
thing I have to do is remember to contain my enthusiasm because sometimes
these things don't happen the way you expect.
TGR: You said that gold
would hit $2,000 about two years from now. Would you consider that gold
mania? Would that be the bump the gold bugs have been looking
for?
CO: No, it's not. I'm
going to try to avoid picking the top of the market and figuring where a
peak will be when it does hit a mania. Really, the $2,000 target price is
based on an inflation-adjusted number for the gold price. The increase in
the money supply, relationships of hard assets versus financial assets;
some of the targets for those things are actually well above $2,000. It's
more likely, in my opinion, to be something substantially higher, and I
don't want to guess what that will be because it's a bit of a game. One
thing I would expect is that it will probably surprise a lot of us just how
high it can go.
TGR: In a recent
commentary, you wrote: "Over the short term we're positive that the
current holdings will perform well should gold and the market continue to
move sideways." That sounds like you're hedging your position on gold
prices.
CO: In the short term, I
think you always have to be cautious because things may surprise you and
the markets may not act rational. It's usually only over the long term that
the true direction gets shown. A lot of the things we talked about earlier
make me very concerned for the broad stock market. If we go back to 2008
where there was a very severe correction in the stock markets, we saw that
the gold price and gold stocks were also impacted in the short term because
when the panic buttons were hit everybody was selling anything they could.
In a crisis gold usually goes up in value.
TGR: In Sprott's All Cap
Fund, gold bullion ranks second to cash and short-term investments. Do you
see a day when bullion is the fund's top holding?
CO: In many respects, it
is the top holding. In the All Cap Fund we can short up to 20% of the
stocks in the portfolio, so when we sell the stocks, effectively our cash
levels go up. But that's money that is required as money on those
investments. In my mind, gold is already the largest position in the All
Cap Fund. Having said that, that could change too.
TGR: If the gold price
does explode, does bullion become a better investment than equities, gold
equities in particular?
CO: One of the things
that I've been fairly consistent in saying to clients is that it's good to
have a combination of both gold bullion and gold stocks. I look at gold
bullion as being defensive in nature; it's really preservation of capital,
preservation of wealth. It's the insurance against Armageddon in the
systems; whereas I look at gold stocks as the ability to get capital
appreciation in a bull market, like the one we're in. Having said that, you
also have to recognize when you're at a peaking point for gold, which isn't
always easy to recognize. There may come a point—and I think we're
far from it—when people are not willing to bid up the price of gold
stocks because they do not believe that the long-term price of gold is
where the current gold price is; they don't believe the increase in
earnings power will be long-term in nature.
TGR: How close are we to
gold's "peaking point"?
CO: If you look at some
of the valuations. For example gold to copper looks like gold is fairly
valued. If you look at it relative to stocks, it's far from the peaks that
we've seen in the past. In a mania, generally you'll see a number of these
ties broken, and probably some irrational exuberance like what happened in
the tech sector a few years ago. But that's quite a long way
out—maybe it's five years, maybe it's 10. But I don't think it's in
the next couple.
TGR: What are some countries, or areas,
that you're interested in at the moment?
CO: As I
mentioned, we do like Canada. We like Canada because of the safety of
jurisdiction and it's a safe place to operate. Having said that, I think
you're starting to see that you're paying a bit of a premium for owning
companies in Canada. One of the other areas that we like is Brazil.
Brazil's a great place to operate. One of the things—I think we've
been talking about this for the past several months —a lot of the
juniors in Brazil trade at very low valuations on ounces in the ground. I
am talking about the companies with significant ounces that might one day
be a mine but are not now.
If you look at the valuations of a lot of these companies,
you're finding that companies may be trading at $25 to $50 an ounce, and
then if you go over to a place like West Africa, you find that a lot of
similar companies are trading at $50 to $100 an ounce or sometimes even
more. Why am I saying West Africa? If you go back in geological time, you
find that Brazil and West Africa were basically side by side, so a lot of
the geology is quite similar. I think this sort of valuation discrepancy in
Brazil does not make an awful lot of sense because it is a very good
jurisdiction to operate, just like many countries in West Africa.
We highlighted this in our December write-up, and we added
a number of Brazilian names, which we think look awfully cheap.
TGR: Are
there any thoughts you would like to leave us with?
CO: Just keep
the faith. Governments around the world continue to spend; they continue to
print; they continue to quantitative ease. Until the governments take the
necessary medicine, the story for gold is going to be very
bright.
Bringing more than 21
years of experience in the investment industry, Charles Oliver joined
Sprott Asset Management (SAM) in January 2008 as an Investment Strategist
with focus on the Sprott Gold and Precious Minerals Fund. Prior to joining
SAM, Charles was at AGF Management Limited, where he led the team that was
awarded the Canadian Investment Awards Best Precious Metals Fund in 2004,
2006, 2007, and was a finalist for the best Canadian Small Cap fund in
2007. At the 2007 Canadian Lipper Fund awards, the AGF Precious Metals Fund
was awarded the best 5-year return in the Precious Metals category, and the
AGF Canadian Resources Fund was awarded the best 10-year return in the
Natural Resources category.
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