51勛圖

Inside Higher Ed: Betting on bling

By Jack Stripling, for

Published on
August 31, 2010
Last updated
May 26, 2015



News that the investment arm of the University of Texas has started buying up gold is validating the concerns of some analysts who fear that high inflation and increasing US debt will wreak havoc on other more commonly held endowment securities, such as bonds.

The University of Texas Investment Management Company (UTIMCO) announced last month that it would move $500 million into gold. While that constitutes just 3 per cent of the $22.3 billion in assets UTIMCO controls, its a marked shift in strategy for a management company that had no gold in its portfolio a year ago.

Bruce Zimmerman, UTIMCOs chief executive officer, described the gold investment as a hedge, which would protect the portfolio if a lack of monetary and fiscal discipline on the part of governments drives down the value of other assets. While not naming names, Zimmerman said he knew of several other endowment managers adopting the same strategy.

I dont believe were the only endowment [doing this], he said. We just happen to be public.

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Fund managers who are using gold to offset other risks are employing a fundamental principle of investment diversity, explains John Nelson, managing director of Moodys Public Finance Group. Any endowment managers goal is to have a portfolio with assets that hold inverse relationships; in other words, if one asset declines in value, the others will increase in value and thereby hedge against risk, Nelson says.

If youre worried about inflation, and youre worried about whether the US dollar will hold its value less than it has historically, then gold is one of the few options youd have, Nelson said.

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Given the fact that a gold investment strategy is predicated on the idea that the dollar is declining and the nation is too deep in debt, the gaga for gold trend gripping the conservative movement as ideologically driven.

But you dont have to be a conservative talk show host to see the merits of UTIMCOs position, said Sandy Leeds, a senior lecturer of finance at the University of Texas at Austins McCombs School of Business. Leeds was so fired up by the news of UTIMCOs strategy that he on the subject for The Houston Chronicle, which on a public meeting where the investments were discussed.

While unstated by UTIMCO, we should consider the possibility that they are hedging against a US meltdown, Leeds wrote.

UTIMCO isnt the only investor pursuing gold in this shaky economy. Indeed, gold futures , and they have gained 13 per cent this year.

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By investing in gold, UTIMCO is bracing for the possibility that inflation will outpace the returns the company is getting on some or many of its bonds, Leeds told Inside Higher Ed.

In a high-inflation environment, bonds will get crushed, Leeds said.

Even so, gold is notoriously volatile, and in real terms, it generally has not held its value in the last 25 years, Nelson said. It always spikes up when people are concerned about the future.

That volatility may be among the reasons gold is not a fixture in a lot of college endowments, but talk of such investments is growing. John Paulson, president, portfolio manager and director of Paulson & Co, recently championed gold at a meeting of the .

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Matt Hamill, senior vice-president of advocacy and issue analysis at NACUBO, said the association doesnt have any hard data yet about whether gold investments are growing within college portfolios. If NACUBOs next annual survey of asset allocations sees an uptick in commodities, however, that could indicate movement towards gold and that would break with historic trends, he said. In 2009, the category that included commodities within alternative asset allocations comprised 12 per cent of surveyed colleges assets, according to a .

As a class [of assets], its not a standard part of every endowment managers desired portfolio, Hamill said.

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