NEW YORK/BOSTON (By Frank Tang and Aaron Pressman) - Billionaire financier George Soros, who called gold "the ultimate bubble," dumped almost his entire $800 million stake in bullion in the first quarter, well before a commodities slump blamed partly on reports he was liquidating his holdings.
Famed gold bull John Paulson held his ground, but Soros was joined in the retreat by several other big names, including Eric Mindich and Paul Touradji, according to 13-F filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that provide the best insight into where hedge funds are placing their bets.
Soros, who has been bullish on gold in the past several years, cut his holdings in the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD.P: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) to just $6.9 million by the end of first quarter, compared with $655 million in December, becoming the most high-profile investors to turn his back on one of the market's best-performing assets.
He also liquidated a 5 million share stake in the iShares Gold Trust (IAU.P: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), the filings showed. His total holdings in gold-backed ETFs was $774 million as of December.
Gold rose for a tenth consecutive quarter in the three months to March, hitting record highs above $1,400 an ounce, buoyed by political turmoil in the Middle East and North Africa and lingering worries about indebted European countries.
The gains
accelerated in April, but peaked
at the start of this month,
reaching a record $1,575 an
ounce on May 2.
Prices have since fallen more
than 5 percent amid the biggest
commodities slump since late
2008, a move partly triggered by
a Wall Street Journal report
that Soros' $28 billion fund was
selling precious metals -- and
felling fears other big funds
were also seeing a peak.









