Yesterday, we awoke to find gold prices off sharply, furthering the consolidation the metal has been under for several days now. What prompted yesterday’s selling was a comment regarding gold from an official from the Bank of Korea (BoK), the South Korean central bank. Like many others recently, the Asian nation is known to be interested in diversifying its foreign reserve holdings away from U.S. dollars. At nearly $271 billion, South Korea’s dollar reserves are the sixth-largest in the world. Traders have been expecting South Korea to follow the lead of China, India and others, by adding gold bullion to its reserves. After all, among the world’s largest economies, South Korea has the smallest gold holdings with just 14.4 metric tons of gold, the equivalent to 0.03 percent of total reserves. That makes them the odd man out as most nations do hold at least a modest portion of their reserves in bullion: 10 percent on average for all nations, and considerably higher levels for the more developed nations. The U.S., for instance, has about 77 percent of its reserves in gold bullion. But contrary to expectations—and reasonable belief—Lee Eung Baek, head of the BoK’s reserve management department said in an interview, “We follow the big trend. Gold isn’t the trend.” Mr. Lee’s statement that gold isn’t in a trend is just plain wrong. As you can see from the chart below, which shows the gain for gold during the past year in both U.S. dollars and South Korean won, while the metal’s performance in terms of the Asian country’s currency has been more muted, it is in a bull market in more than just greenbacks. Indeed, gold has been a better investment than holding most paper currencies over that time. A long-term chart, say since the beginning of the decade, would demonstrate an even more pronounced uptrend for the yellow metal. In terms of the won it has gained more than 300 percent! We found it odd the South Koreans would forego the metal simply because it “offers little value,” with “no cash returns” in the worlds of Mr. Lee. Given that gold is the only “currency” that isn’t simultaneously someone else’s liability, and with so many of the world’s major currencies seemingly racing each other to the debasement cellar, to say gold offers little value is absurd. We look forward to reporting the day when the South Koreans get religion and start buying gold. We don’t know if will be at $1,500 an ounce, $1,800 or $2,000, but we’re confident that day will come. Of course chances are Mr. Lee will have gotten the boot before then. In the short term, gold could pull back further. There’s a gap in its price chart down around $1,047, so a dip slightly below that level is quite possible. But that represents a rather modest decline that would merely erase the gains of the past month. Moreover, it would set the stage for another leg up in the bull market that shows every indication of being in a major long-term bull market. A few weeks back we pointed to investors’ lackluster interest in silver as a sign that the party is just warming up in precious metals. The South Korean official’s ambivalent view toward gold is another indicator that we have far further to go on the upside. If, again in the words of Mr. Lee, “There’s an illusion in gold,” it’s that the metal isn’t a legitimate asset class that deserves a prominent place in every portfolio. Don’t let the current minor pullback shake your faith in precious metals. Instead, view it as a good buying opportunity. The fundamental case for gold remains as strong as ever.