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#Commodities Corner: Where gold stands a year after hitting a record-high price

#Commodities Corner: Where gold stands a year after hitting a record-high price

Gold futures trade over 10% below their record highs

Nearly a year since gold marked its highest price on record, the precious metal has little to show for it.

On Aug. 6, 2020, gold futures
GC00,
+1.69%

GCZ21,
+1.67%
settled at $2,069.40 an ounce, their highest finish on record. A day later, prices hit an intraday, all-time high of $2,089.20.

The record highs “were driven by the initial flight to safety, followed by the reaction to the massive monetary and fiscal policies” put into play to strengthen the economy in the wake of the pandemic, says William Cai, co-founder and managing partner at Wilshire Phoenix. Due to the pandemic, the U.S. Federal Reserve has kept its benchmark interest rate close to zero, benefiting gold.

Prices for the metal, however, have eased back by around 12% from the record and may suffer the first yearly loss since 2018.

The pullback in gold is a “healthy consolidation,” with the market digesting the effects of those monetary policies and potential follow-on policy adjustments, Cai says. Inflation, meanwhile, looks to be the major factor that will continue to support gold prices in the medium term, he says.

Read: Global gold investment down 60% in first half of 2021, report finds

The Fed has helped to ease some of the uncertainty driving demand for gold as a haven. The central bank’s loose monetary policy contributed to the creation of an “economic bubble” to offset Covid-19’s harmful economic impact, says Drew Rathgeber, senior futures broker and branch manager at AIO Capital.

On March 8, gold futures dropped to $1,678, their lowest since April 2020, amid strength in the U.S. dollar and a rise in Treasury bond yields, which can dull demand for gold.

But don’t count gold out yet, says Rathgeber. “A perfect storm is setting up for gold…to go much higher.” Inflation is “here to stay for a while,” in part due to the Fed’s loose monetary policy and its failure to highlight “cost-push inflation,” he says. A rise in the cost of production and raw materials leads to cost-push inflation, and inflation can decrease the value of the dollar over time, raising gold’s investment appeal.


“A perfect storm is setting up for gold…to go much higher.”


— Drew Rathgeber, AIO Capital

The Fed has said the sharp rise in inflation this year is “transitory,” suggesting that the central bank will not tighten monetary policy and will continue to hold off raising interest rates, which is supportive for gold.

On July 28, the Fed reiterated that it believes higher inflation this year reflects transitory factors. It also said the U.S. economy has made progress toward reaching its standards for easing back on its bond-buying program, but not enough for it to start doing so yet.

The Fed is “in a bind,” says Matt Psarras, head of client relations and market research for GoldCore USA. If inflation is not transitory and instead persistent, “it will feed on itself and eventually…boil over into a ‘consumer strike’ as wage growth falls far behind the cost of living.”

As money becomes worth less,  gold prices will rise, he says. And if management of debt issues becomes “disorderly,” gold could go “parabolic” as investors clamor to buy it.

At around $1,800, Psarras says gold is “exceptionally cheap.” It can moderate investors’ emotions during a time of crisis, without fully exposing them to the market. “Gold cannot go to zero—almost everything else can,” he says.

On Thursday, futures prices for the precious metal were up by more than 1% in the wake of the Fed’s latest policy update and weaker than expected U.S. economic data.

Looking ahead, interest rates, debt, and inflation are the market indicators to watch, says Psarras. If interest rates rise, inflation stays nominal, and debt levels become more sustainable, “gold will lose favor as demand for a safe haven ebbs,” he says.

If interest rates stay low or fall further, or inflation rises and possibly switches to stagflation where growth falters, then gold will “rise with gusto.”

Either way, on a long-term basis, a modest 10% allocation in gold makes a “world of sense,” says Psarras.

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