International Business Times

Irish shift savings into gold in a slow bankrun

December 16, 2010 9:47 PM EST

Disgusted by how the banks have wrecked the economy and worried their savings are no longer secure, some Irish people are buying gold and diamonds or storing their money in safes until the crisis blows over.

Ireland's government has guaranteed deposits but anxiety about what the future holds, particularly after Dublin was forced to seek a bailout from the EU and the IMF last month, has some savers seeking alternatives to the banks.

"There has been an increase in demand, sustained over a period of months. There's been a slight increase in the last month. We get that every single day. From mom and pop investors to high net worth individuals," Mark O'Byrne, executive director of bullion dealer GoldCore, told Reuters.

O'Byrne said the firm always advised its customers not to turn their savings exclusively into gold.

"Gold is a classic hedge against the rest of your portfolio and you should put 5-10 percent," he said, adding that more companies were diversifying their cash holdings into gold than before.

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"We had a few (corporate deposits) per year before, now we have a few per week," he said.

Tony Cahill of the Retail Jewellers of Ireland, which has 130 members, also said he was seeing a similar trend.

"The reality is gold was never as expensive as it is now, and with the uncertainty in markets ... more people are looking at investing in diamond rings and gold," he said.

"They're scared of banks, scared of uncertainty in the markets ... That's what it's going to be from now on," Cahill told Reuters.

UNCERTAINTY

Tom Crowley, a 46-year-old accountant, said he decided a few months ago to invest in gold. With banks reliant on state support, construction firms going bust and the euro under pressure over the debt crisis, gold was a "very attractive option".

He now has about five percent of his portfolio in gold, "but it's something that I'm building up," he told Reuters.

"I see it as a hedge and safe haven from turbulent markets. The currency risk ... and what will happen with the euro prompted me to look at gold."

Gold XAU= hit record highs above $1,425 an ounce last week, partly due to investors spooked by the euro zone debt crisis. A year ago gold was about $1,200 an ounce.

Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.
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