Slotine wrote:
GTU is being paid 0.30% for the first AUM of $100M, 0.225% between $100-$200M, and 0.15% above $200M. They get more than enough money to cover costs as you can store unencumbered gold at about 0.12% flat and cheaper by bulk weight.
This is still money coming out of the NAV, although since their fund only requires that at minimum 90% is actually held in gold, they don't really need to ever sell gold to pay themselves. The actual trustee policy is to target 95% though.
As for premiums affecting their bottom line. They can't as it's illegal. Money from new shares minus part of which goes to underwriting fees, has to be split as declared in the 'Use of Proceeds' section of their prospectus. 95% as bullion, up to 5% as certificates, and the remainder as cash. All three increase the NAV correspondingly. It doesn't mean they can't withdraw their 0.225% the next day, but there's no pocketing of extra profit involved.
I'm not saying the fund doesn't have expenses, or that the expenses aren't ultimately paid by the shareholders. Rather, when creating shares there's a profit involved (which indeed becomes an asset of the fund, so reflected in the NAV) and the fund uses this profit to pay its expenses. In the case of GLD, creating/destroying shares also creates a profit, but all of the profit goes to the APs and none of it to the shareholders (the goal is to induce the APs to keep GLD's market price close to its NAV) - so there's no way GLD can pay any expenses except by selling some of the gold held by the fund (creating an ever dwindling oz/share ratio).
In 50 years, I'd expect GTU's oz/share ratio to still be approximately what it is now. It's older sister fund, CEF, has essentially done this over the past 40+ years (CEF is a little more complicated to evaluate since it holds a gold/silver blend with a 50/50 value target).
In 50 years, GLD's oz/share will be a little less than 82% of what it is now (assuming the ER stays at 0.4%).
In both cases, the funds will have extracted about the same percentage of expenses from the fund's NAV. But GTU effectively has an income, while GLD does not.