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Gold hits another all time nominal high of $1,059 Oct. 7

Friday, October 9th, 2009 | Economics |

MoneyWeek - Gold hits an all-time high - yet no one’s interested:

I remain among my ‘cleverer’ friends (some of them owned Northern Rock) the eccentric who bought gold. I am still waiting for the day when they come to me asking for mining tips. Long may it be before they do so.

In any case, it’s important to enjoy the moment – we often forget to. But, come the morning after, as our wizened man from the 1970s will tell you, one would advise some caution. Gold has made a daily close at all-time highs, but we need to see a couple of weekly closes above this level to confirm things.

As I’ve often said, I still expect gold to go a lot higher in the longer term – at the moment I expect $1,400 by spring 2010. But it won’t get there in a straight line, and for now, the positions taken by the futures traders on the Comex suggest a top. If stock markets do turn down, they will take gold and gold stocks with them.

I originally said I’d buy gold after it went down a bit. Then I relented and bought my first gold ETFs in my 401K retirement account just below $800/ounce. I bought more in the $800s, then more in the $900s. I’ve picked up a bit more at the over-$1,000 price based on bullish trends. The upside potential seems much greater than the downside risk.

I’ve diversified my purchases into different ETFs - GLD, GTU, CEF, and lately all of it in SGOL (Swedish Gold ETF, which promises 1/10 ounce physical gold held in reserve for every share). GTU has performed the worst of the bunch, so I’ve reduced my holdings in it to almost nothing.

Note that gold investments are taxed at the higher collectible tax rate rather than the normal investment tax rate. I do almost all of my investing through my tax-protected 401K (more on that later), so it doesn’t matter to me, but it might matter to you. Consult a financial adviser or CPA for tax implications.

At this point silver may increase even more rapidly than gold. It has roughly doubled in less than a year. The CEF ETF includes some silver exposure. I also hold the SLV and SIVR ETFs. With ETFs diversification is good (see below).

Don’t forget energy stocks. There’s currency, there’s precious metals, and there’s oil and other energy equivalents. The last two are real. Everything else that’s based on paper and promises are potentially phony.

Speaking of which, for warnings on the SLV ETF see here. For very serious warnings on leveraged (AKA Ultra) and inverse ETFs see here. ETFs aren’t completely real - they’re based on markets and paper, too. For precious metals it’s always best to own the real stuff to eliminate counterparty risk. As always, my amateur investment advice is worth exactly what you paid for it. Caveat non-emptor.

Previously - Gold hit an all time nominal high ($1,008) on Sept. 30

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