Gold ETF approaches 4 mln shares traded
By John Spence, CBS MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 12:26 PM ET Nov. 18, 2004
BOSTON (CBS.MW) - By lunchtime on its first day of trading, StreetTracks Gold Shares (GLD: news, chart, profile) traded over 3.7 million shares, well over the 2.3 million underwritten shares that were priced in the initial public offering.
After a long wait and much anticipation, the first exchange-traded fund that invests directly in gold bullion began trading on the New York Stock Exchange Thursday.
"This one is going to go gangbusters," said Jim Wiandt, editor of IndexUniverse.com.
"It opens up a new asset class to investors," he added. "And arguably, this could completely tilt the gold market and have macro-economic consequences."
The World Gold Council is the fund's sponsor and Boston-based State Street is the marketing agent.
Blocks of 100,000 shares are redeemable into gold bullion, and shares should be priced at about 10 percent of the price of a troy ounce of gold.
Earlier this week gold reached a 16-year high and some observers are calling for it to hit $450 before the end of the year. The new gold ETF could open a floodgate of new cash into gold as it will make investing in bullion easier for investors and many analysts said anticipation of the gold ETF was pushing gold higher before the launch.
"The introduction of the StreetTracks Gold ETF represents a major step forward for the ETF industry and investors by allowing individuals and small institutions an easy and cost-efficient vehicle to invest in gold as an asset class," said Jim Pacetti, head of consulting firm ETF International. "Previously, one had to use either the physical gold with the associated storage and insurance costs and wide spreads or use derivatives."
The World Gold Council first filed the prospectus with the SEC in May 2003 and managed to beat ETF giant Barclays Global Investors to the punch by being first to market.
BGI has filed a gold ETF with the SEC to be called iShares COMEX Gold Trust, which is slated to list on the American Stock Exchange.
Together, these products could gather $2 billion in assets in the next six months, Pacetti believes.
"There is certainly retail demand, but one interesting aspect of this story is that many institutional players had before been restricted from either holding gold directly or holding futures on gold," added Wiandt.
Both ETFs are designed to reflect the price of gold owned by the trust, less the expenses of the trust's operations.
The funds will pay their fees by selling off small amounts of gold bullion. In other words, the fractional amount of physical gold represented by each share will decrease over the life of the trust.
Gold, like artwork, is classified as a collectible by the IRS and is therefore taxed at a higher 28 percent capital-gains rate in the United States after being held for more than one year.
According to filings, both ETFs will be structured as grantor investment trusts rather than registered investment companies, and expenses will be priced identically at 0.4 percent of assets. The Bank of New York will be the trustee for both ETFs.
Elsewhere, gold ETFs have already been listed in England, Australia, and South Africa.
In midday trading, shares of the gold ETF were down 0.7 percent to $44.12.
John Spence is a reporter for CBS MarketWatch in Boston.
-END-