Analysts thinks gold could beat the S&P 500 (again)
Bullion.Directory precious metals analysis 22 November, 2021
By Peter Reagan
Financial Market Strategist at Birch Gold Group
Bloomberg recently opined that gold could beat the S&P 500 Index, as it habitually does, by 20% as stagflation can no longer be ignored.
The article notes that economic growth seems to be peaking around the time when high inflation is only starting to gain traction. One of the primary correlations is gold’s inverse relationship with real yields on Treasuries, the latter having sunk to all-time lows as of late.
This has flared up gold’s 20-week moving averages and signals that a prolonged breakout could be in the works next year.
The signal is the sixth instance, still ongoing, of gold’s 20-week moving average crossing bandwidth below 6 in the last two decades. Each of the five instances resulted in gold outperforming the S&P 500 Index by an average of 19% over the following year.
While several analysts have upgraded their gold forecasts in line with cautious sentiment and inflation awareness, Goldman’s are among the more bullish ones.
The bank’s head of energy research Damien Courvalin said that gold is set to move far past its current price, bolstering previous calls for clients to consider the metal’s upside. Goldman set a -1.10% target for 30-year real yields which, if met, will bring gold to $2,300 territory.
The metal should also benefit from relatively low weighing among investors right now, along with volatility still lingering close to 2-year lows.
Milton Friedman wouldn’t have bought temporary inflation, and neither should you
From the Federal Reserve to the European Central Bank, officials have done nothing but downplay the impact of an unprecedented expansion in the money supply. According to them, any spikes in inflation are, and will be, so brief that they might as well be ignored.
But this has already proven untrue, and the most accurate inflation models tell us that inflation is yet to truly materialize.
Renowned economist Milton Friedman asserted that inflation is the result of a simple supply and demand dynamic, appearing when too much money is being printed and dumped into the economy. All other factors, from wages to prices, are a byproduct of inflation, not a cause.
The three stretches where consumer prices spiked above 10% annually, far and above the intended 2% rate, were precipitated by two instances of the money supply rising by nearly 14%.
This monetary expansion started in the 1970s and the toxic combination of low growth and high inflation we call stagflation persisted until the early 1980s.
Last February, the monetary expansion hit 27.1%, and still lingers around 13%, a rate double that of 2019 and earlier, as well as double the long-term average for the 50-year period. (To put this into perspective, about 40% of the dollars in the world were printed in the last 18 months.)
Déjà vu all over again?
It seems likely. In their Wall Street Journal piece, John Greenwood and Steve Hanke noted that asset-price inflation happens with a 1-9 month lag, economic activity picks up within 6-18 months, and only after 12-24 months does the generalized inflation kick in.
This suggests that inflation, along with the consequent gains in gold, won’t peak until Q1 2022.
From there, both should soar until at least the middle of the year. Of course, this isn’t accounting for any subsequent monetary pumps, or a Federal Reserve tightening cycle that seems increasingly likely to never happen.
Have the markets finally come to terms with inflation sticking around?
Gold’s price action last week tells a tale of realistic inflation worries mixed with what looks to be some fairly unrealistic optimism. After a lengthy period of inaction, the metal spiked to $1,866 on Wednesday and finished the week lower at $1,845.
It did so even as the U.S. dollar climbed to its highest level since last July, riding on some better-than-expected data in the U.S.
Considering that a strong dollar has always acted as gold’s biggest headwind, we see just how prevalent concerns over inflation are right now. And not without reason.
Besides the tripling of the Federal Reserve’s inflation target, Britain has also seen inflation hit a 10-year high, and Canada’s annual rate matched a February 2003 high this October. Even the Euro zone is seeing inflation twice as high as its 2% target.
Meanwhile, we’ve seen silver, platinum and palladium all post smaller gains alongside gold’s. Experienced precious metals investors shouldn’t be too surprised by this divergence. After all, both platinum and palladium are primarily industrial metals and tend to move more like industrial commodities.
In other words, bad economic news can drive their prices down. Silver’s demand base is nearly evenly split between industrial and investment buyers, so bad economic news might push silver’s price up or down.
David Meger, director of metals trading at High Ridge Futures, reiterated where our attention should be focused: “The underlying support for gold and silver remains the inflationary pressures we continue to see in the market,” he said.
A hawkish Fed sentiment may perhaps the main threat to prices, but, with Jerome Powell’s reappointment, that simply doesn’t seem to be in the cards. Kinesis Money’s Carlo Alberto De Casa thinks the next major benchmark for gold’s price is $1,875.
He sees that as a launching pad to the next big leg up. Once again, only rate hikes stand in gold’s way.
So far, though, Fed-related pressures have mostly come in the form of markets anticipating hawkish plans or demonstrating naive optimism. It’s still a point of contention if, or how, the Fed can raise interest rates at all, or apply any sort of significant tightening.
The tools may exist but the political will to use them seems as dead as Paul Volcker or fiscal restraint.
Peter Reagan
Peter Reagan is a financial market strategist at Birch Gold Group, one of America’s leading precious metals dealers, specializing in providing gold IRAs and retirement-focused precious metals portfolios.
Peter’s in-depth analysis and commentary is published across major investment portals, news channels, popular US conservative websites and most frequently on Birch Gold Group’s own website.
This article was originally published here
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