While the stock market is within a couple percentage points of all-time highs, gold is now testing the $2,000-per-ounce mark.
This may seem counter-intuitive with both rising at the same time. In some ways it is, but it isn’t.
It isn’t just a doom-and-gloom counter-narrative, though plenty of gold haters always see any rise in gold prices that way.
Instead, what we’re seeing is the formation of a long-term trend both in underlying causes and investor activity.
This gold bull market is firming up and growing even stronger behind the scenes.
With the Fed and other central banks directly intervening in bond markets and pushing yields to near- or below-zero, it makes sense for both gold and the stock market to go up at the same time.
It risks being overly simplistic, but the vast majority of investors and investor funds have four options: cash, stocks, bonds, and commodities.
Cash is clearly not ideal since it can generate no profit but it does buy investors time and flexibility. Bonds are a wasteland of low to no yields in spite of greatly increased risk thanks to intervention by the Fed and other central banks.
That leaves two options for anyone wanting any kind of return for their risk and for money that would normally go to bonds to spill into.
We’re certainly seeing a lot of interest in stocks in spite of the economic peril. Big tech and biotech share prices have gone haywire in particular.
And that leaves commodities. For many years they have attracted historically small amounts of investor interest.
That is changing now and in a major way, especially for gold, and it doesn’t take much to move the needle in a major way. Commodities and their related stocks are a relatively tiny slice of the broader investment world, both for number of investors and for total size of their investments.
Gold is up 30% for the year and even more over the last full year. Silver has doubled since hitting a low mark in March. Copper is up close to 30% and aluminum is up 17% since March as well.
That spillover and increased concern about the direction of currencies and economies is creating something in the commodities space we haven’t seen in years.
From mom-and-pop investors to pension funds, to private wealth managers and insurance companies, interest in gold is finding a very broad base of support.
Gold ETFs and funds are seeing record inflows from small investors.
Even Pimco, the go-to shop for bond products, is moving towards gold. As Geraldine Sundstrom, who focuses on asset allocation strategies, told Bloomberg, “We need to diversify our diversifier and look for safe haven beyond government bonds. Given Pimco’s view that rates will be kept very low for years to come causing depressed levels of real yield, gold feels like an appropriate diversifier.”
Citigroup Inc. mentioned “new non-traditional investors in bullion, including insurance companies and pension funds” in a May note to investors without going into specifics.
While Citigroup didn’t explicitly cite that, its internal data certainly would have added to its call for gold to continue past all-time highs about a month later.
Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs have been telling investors that gold is going to keep surging for even longer. Some of their bullish models call for gold from $2,300 to $3,000 before the run ends.
Even notoriously tight-lipped private banks and funds have admitted to large increases gold allocations for their clients. Swiss private bank Lombard Odier & Cie SA fessed up recently and Arbuthnot Latham & Co. admitted to adding gold mining companies to its mix.
This broad interest across all investor types is creating a similarly broad base of support for rising gold prices.
This isn’t a melt-up scenario where a relatively small group of very interested investors bid each other up. There will be no flash crash like we saw in Bitcoin several years ago, or other flash-in-the-pan investment fads.
This is a broad upturn based on factors that will play out for years to come and provide a floor to slow or prevent downturns in price.
Economic uncertainty, zero yield quality bonds, a dollar that has lost 10% of its value in recent months with a longer-term downtrend, and a need for diversification from historically high over-representation of stocks in portfolios. It all adds up.
This is how a long-term upward trend in gold prices is forming behind the scenes right now.
The trend will only get stronger as more come on board. More investors and money will keep coming flooding in.. Make sure you’re able to take home a share of the gains to come.