Gold has long served as a tool for investors to enhance their portfolios and protect against volatility.
At the Vancouver Resource Investment Conference, CEO Jay Martin engaged with industry experts Frank Giustra, Grant Williams, Alastair Still and David Garofalo to explore trends currently affecting the sector.
The group illustrated a market at a crucial juncture, with changing investor sentiment, geopolitical tensions and impending financial instability converging to potentially create the perfect storm.
Eastern vs. western perspectives on gold
Martin kicked the panel off by reviewing the last several years in the gold market. Looking back at 2019 and 2020, he noted that an influx of western investors helped pushed the metal’s price to phenomenal levels.
However, as the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic drove inflation and interest rates, these investors became sellers, and gold started to sink. Capitalizing on these lower price points, central banks moved into the market and not only stabilized the price, but caused it to surge to all-time highs. By mid-2024, gold was 70 percent above its 2022 low.
Frank Giustra, CEO of the Fiore Group, largely agreed with Martin’s summary of gold’s activity, but added that while he thinks central bank buying will continue, there is more going on than meets the eye.
“What most people donâ€
Giustra sees the US fiscal situation as a factor pushing the gold price up, and suggested that the situation is not only beyond repair, but also on the precipice of a crisis. “At some point there will be a US dollar crisis. Itâ€
Grant Williams, author at Things That Make You Go Hmmm, expanded on Giustraâ€
Williams also suggested that the west is at the end of a cycle. In his view, investors are attempting to maximize their returns in any way possible, and the system is corrupt and lacks consequences.
“This is going to come to a head. Weâ€
‘We are moving into the part of this where it’s not just a good idea to own gold anymore — it’s essential to own gold. And I think the price is going to reflect that in the coming 12 to 18 months.’
Tech stocks, Bitcoin distracting investors from gold
The panelists agreed that todayâ€
While technology stocks still follow the typical market ebbs and flows, cryptocurrencies are a different story.
Giustra even compared the crypto space to a Ponzi scheme, pointing to one influential commenter who has suggested that Bitcoin will reach a value of US$13 million and gold will reach zero.
“These are ridiculous statements, but he needs to make those kinds of statements to keep the greed factor going. In any pyramid scheme, you need to have new buyers all the time to keep the game going,� he said.
Giustra also outlined how the cryptocurrency space has influenced the recent US election, spending US$245 million to influence Congress and the incoming president to ease regulations. This comes from a shifting narrative that implies crypto is a store of value. Giustra believes it’s an asset class in search of a purpose.
GoldMining (TSX:GOLD,NYSEAMERICAN:GLDG) CEO Alastair Still backed Giustra, saying that unlike gold, Bitcoins can be created every day, while goldâ€
Still described how resource scarcity has been tested, outlining how geopolitically stable jurisdictions are diminishing. At the same time, mining companies have underinvested in exploration and been slow to find new assets.
“So while I think many investors are a little behind the curve,’ he explained at VRIC.
‘What we have seen is the major operating companies, they’re running deficits in their reserves, so theyâ€
Gold majors dealing with low grades, declining reserves
The systemic underfunding of exploration could be an opportunity for explorers and developers to start acquiring projects that will be sought by majors in the future. As it stands, miners are having to maximize extraction efforts.
“The operators are mining lower grades. That doesnâ€
David Garofalo, CEO, president, chairman and director at Gold Royalty (NYSEAMERICAN:GROY), agreed that operators are facing a challenge. “Theyâ€
He went on to explain that the entire industry is facing cost pressures.
All-in-sustaining costs have risen along with the price of gold, leading to a squeeze among producers. Much of this is due to inflation, which has resonated throughout the general economy.
“Thatâ€
Rising costs and chronic underfunding are causing a dual squeeze. No new projects are in the pipeline, and he doesnâ€
They can grow their share count, but not the gold they have access to, theyâ€
Which gold stocks to focus on now?
Garofalo suggested that the right space to be in now is the development stage. He thinks the majors are approaching a point where they need to add assets to their portfolios to continue to grow.
“The industry has basically been giving money back to investors for the last dozen years in dividends and share buybacks and whatnot, and not meaningfully back into the grassroots exploration to replace depleting reserves,� he said.
Likewise, Giustra backed the idea that the gold sector needs more consolidation.
“There are far too many companies burning a lot of overhead. The industry needs to consolidate. We need to deliver performance. And so itâ€
Williams added that itâ€
“That shouldnâ€
‘Itâ€
Stay tuned for more event coverage, including video interviews with many of the experts who attended.
Securities Disclosure: I, Dean Belder, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.