Thursday, September 17, 2009

Tax Is A Four Letter Word

Golden Exuberance
Gold prices have surged in recent days, with the price pushing up above $1000 per troy ounce, and close to its all time high. I have expected strength throughout 2009 and so have been looking for a rise like this, which is why I took a fairly signficant position back in January. Additionally it has served as a useful hedge against both inflation and my substantial US dollar holdings.

As of this morning I took the decision to realise my gains - a fairly modest 12% but not bad over 9 months. I am not alone in believing the recent rises are unsustainable, as this article on gold prices from the Daily Telegraph outlines.

"London's leading gold forecaster has advised clients to liquidate holdings of gold and silver until the latest speculative fever abates."

I still adamantly believe that inflation is a near certainty in 2010 and beyond, as this is the easy way for politicians to offset the enormous debt that all the government support has lead to over the last year. As such I will be watching the gold price carefully over the coming months, with an aim of buying in once there is a fall back. On that note, I have continued to be surprised by the strength of the wider market recovery since March - it seems to have gone beyond rational, and a correction is necessary.

Investors seem to have become inebriated on the 6 month returns, a classic sign a bubble is forming that will surely deflate once institutions take a cold look at the economic fundamentals in the coming dark months of autumn.

Addendum: just logged back in today (Sep 18) and noticed this video linked to the right under CNBC: Commodities also discussing gold stocks losing their lustre which is worth a watch.

Capital Gains
Inevitably a significant question for any investor is when to realise profit (or loss - the latter is equally important). Like all investment decisions, that should never be taken rashly and certainly never based on emotion.

With GGP up around 600% now since bankruptcy, and for me around 300%, I am sitting on an unrealised profit of around £250,000 (approx $400,000) at present. You might think I would also contemplate cashing in, however I consider this investment between 6 and 24 months away from reaching fair value. Additionally realising a gain of that level requires careful planning, so I am beginning to look at ways of reducing the tax level payable. Sorry Gordon, I am already 'contributing' enough to the UK's recovery.

On the subject of GGP, its spectacular rises in recent days will also likely see a correction back soon enough, although the upward trend should continue. It has been fuelled partly by the wider market reassessing the firm as a value prospect, institutional buyers returning and crucially the belief that existing shares have a significant chance of retaining value.

That has been helped by further comments on Bloomberg by David Simon of Simon Property Group yesterday, describing SPG as a "logical buyer" of General Growth Properties assets. Limited asset sales at the right price are in everybody's interests here so a deal with some of the major REIT's is looking increasingly likely to be announced over the coming months.

Deleveraging GGP is important, and is rather like selling a holiday home to reduce the mortgage on a main house: it might seem a shame, but ultimately is the route to being financially healthier in years to come through lower debt. Of greater significance to me however is this news that the US Treasury has taken on board the significant criticisms of the tax rules that penalised those seeking to manage distressed debt.


Of course, this was cited as a major factor in the inevitability of General Growth Properties needing to restructure within Chapter 11. The removal of this sends a powerful message to the credit markets that renegotiating in these times is not just possible but expected. That benefits all REIT's, but also GGP for those loans in the joint venture SPE's that are outside bankruptcy.

It also benefits General Growth by providing further evidence that equivalent extension deals will be being agreed on the wider market when included in the restructuring plan and submission to the court. I would be surprised if we did not see GGP's share price at $8/share or higher by next spring based on the current news and developments.

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I'm always interested in what you have to say, in particular negative opinions so feel free to post an insult or two here. Emerging Investor