Company Profiles
Monetary Metals Says Gold Yield Marketplace Fits Wealth Menus

Confounding the standard line that gold doesn't produce a yield, a business that uses gold to earn more of the metal argues that it fits into mainstream asset allocation and approaches to liquidity. We talk to Monetary Metals, a firm that is now over a decade old.
We are just beyond the halfway point of 2023 and where does gold fit into wealth managers' thoughts? And what place does it have on the menu?
Well, it appears that gold has had quite a good year so far. As 2023 got under way, investment figures were bullish on gold. And while rising interest rates aren’t always auspicious for gold, the yellow metal rose in the late winter and spring in an uncertain financial climate, starting at $1,854 per ounce on 3 January and reaching a high on 3 May 2023 of just over $2,050, before easing off a few weeks ago.
Geopolitics are as unappealing as ever, there is a likely fractious presidential election in the US next year, and there is due to be a UK general election in 2024. The economic sounds coming out of the UK and US are mixed, they are a concern in continental Europe, although a bit better in Asia. All in all, the supposed “safe-haven” asset of gold has its fans and is winning more. UBS, in a note a few days ago, said it remains positive on gold.
Monetary Metals, a Scottsdale, Arizona-based business, says it offers a unique approach to tapping into the gold story: a yield in gold and paid in gold. The firm uses the gold to earn more gold. It has been developing the gold yield marketplace™, not for buying and selling gold but to connect gold investors seeking a yield with corporations and institutions who need gold capital and can pay in gold for it.
In May, it entered into an agreement with Asahi Refining (Asahi), a division of Japan’s Asahi Holdings. Monetary Metals provides metal to Asahi. Asahi, in turn, provides its services to Monetary Metals, which helps expand Monetary Metals’ capabilities. In the same month, the firm appointed Jeff Deist, who had been president of the Mises Institute, a free market think tank in the US, as general counsel. Deist also worked in the congressional office of Dr Ron Paul, and focused on areas such as monetary policy and the US Federal Reserve.
Family offices, ultra-high net worth and HNW individuals are clients that Monetary Metals has and wants to do business with. Keith Weiner, founder and CEO, likes to point out how his firm differs from most in a sector that sometimes suffers from being seen as eccentric or very “niche.” Weiner spends a large chunk of his year flying around financial capitals, talking to investors and prospects.
Getting paid in gold
“Monetary Metals is the only company that offers a Yield on Gold,
Paid in Gold® to investors by financing qualified gold-using
businesses. Investors can choose between short duration, secured
leases, which offer between 2 per cent to as high as 4 per cent
per annum. Or they can choose longer duration, riskier bonds that
can offer double digit yields on an annual basis,” Weiner
said.
“The more wealth one has, the more one stands to lose. And therefore, the greater care one must take in stewarding that wealth,” he continued.
Family offices and others looking after large amounts of private clients’ wealth, need to be careful. As reported here, UHNW individuals put inflation high up on their concerns. Wobbles in the Western banking system (Credit Suisse, First Republic Bank, Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank) underscore the need for solidity.
“In light of the most recent banking crisis, gold offers so much. It offers one-of-a-kind protection against bank default risk, one-of-a-kind protection against erosion of principal due to inflation, and one-of-a-kind diversification for your asset portfolio, lowering volatility without sacrificing returns,” Weiner said.
“What we offer is gold with yield. This removes the carry cost of owning physical gold, which can create a drag on returns and often deters large institutions from owning it. But even more importantly, our Gold Fixed Income offers an alternative to dollar fixed income and similar products. These currency fixed income markets are volatile and riddled with hidden and opaque risk. Not to mention capital allocators must constantly contend with inflation eroding away both yield and principal returns,” Weiner continued.
“Put it this way, assuming an equal risk profile, if you could earn 3 per cent in gold, or 3 per cent in dollars over the next 10 years, which would you choose?” he said.
It is now just over a decade since Weiner founded the business. It initially offered precious metals analysis and research. In 2016, Monetary Metals launched its Gold Fixed Income product line, beginning with its first gold lease. Since then, it has continued to build out its Gold Fixed Income product offerings, issuing and funding what it says is the first true gold bond in the US since 1933, and funding more than 50 gold and silver leases.
The origins
Weiner explains how he got into this business.
“It was the summer of 2008 and I had just completed the successful sale of my previous company Diomandware in a $10 million deal. Nortel Networks, as it was known then, was the strategic buyer. Diamondware was a software company (I was a software engineer in my previous life) that pioneered 3D voice technology before Apple and others thought it was cool. The acquisition was finalised on 19 August 2008, just as the financial crisis unfolded. I found out later it was the last deal Nortel did before they went bankrupt! And soon after, the entire world seemed to be teetering on the edge as the crisis worsened,” he said.
“So, I’m sitting there having just experienced a life-changing financial milestone, while traditional financial institutions were melting all around me. Needless to say, I was motivated to dig in and really understand what was going on. The more I read (and I read a lot), the more it became clear to me that the crash was much more than a few banks making some bad bets.
“The root of the crisis lay in the nature of the monetary system
itself. Before then, I thought I’d go on to build another
software company. And, if it weren’t for the GFC, that’s exactly
what I’d be doing. But once I understood monetary science, gold,
and the problems we continue to face today (which are getting
worse, not better), I decided then my next venture would be in
the gold space. And Monetary Metals was born,” he said.