| June 19 (Bloomberg) --
Gold prices may rise to $5,000 an ounce as investors seek to protect
themselves against accelerating inflation, said Schroder Investment
Management Ltd., which oversees $277 billion of assets globally.
``You could easily see for the next
several years that prices rise not to $1,000 an ounce, but prices
rise to $5,000 an ounce or beyond as inflation psychology becomes
more and more embedded and people become desperate to have a source
of value,'' said Christopher Wyke, London-based emerging market debt
and commodities product manager at Schroder, which oversees about
$10 billion of commodity assets.
Investors are turning to gold for
protection as two-thirds of the world's population cope with
inflation rates that are climbing to more than 10 percent, Wyke
said. Cash and inflation- linked bonds are poor substitutes as low
interest rates, coupled with surging inflation, erode the real value
of assets, he said.
Bullion for immediate delivery was
down 0.2 percent at $892.48 an ounce at 9:57 a.m. in Singapore,
after gaining 3 percent in the past four days. Wyke didn't give a
time frame for his gold prediction.
Demand for gold will also
rise as central banks become net buyers for the first time in 20
years, driven by developing countries, he added. Last year,
world production of gold sank to the lowest since 1937 as reserves
are depleted and few new sources of gold have been found.
New Fund
Wyke was speaking at a press
conference in Hong Kong today to market the Schroder Alternative
Solutions Gold and Metals Fund, the first commodity fund authorized
for sale to individuals in the city that invests primarily in
derivatives, including futures, warrants, swaps and options. Robert
Howell and Paula Bujia will manage the fund.
Gold may account for about 40 percent
of the fund's assets, based on a ``model'' fund used to simulate
returns, said Wyke. The fund would also buy securities linked to
metals including aluminum, copper, iron ore, zinc and uranium.
The limited amount of gold
available, relative to the size of the global capital markets, means
a small shift in investments may lead to significant price changes
for the metal, Wyke said. Total gold above ground is worth about
$4.8 trillion, compared with global stock and bond markets worth
$135.2 trillion.
UBS AG, Hang Seng Bank Ltd., KBC
Groep NV and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. are among firms that
manage commodity funds in the city, according to the Hong Kong
Securities and Futures Commission. Bank of East Asia Ltd. in
February started a fund that buys shares of companies that produce
materials and energy. |