Gold run has further to go as bulls celebrate

Gold run has further to go as bulls celebrate
Lower US interest rates will provide new gains for bullion.
AUG 26, 2024

Gold’s record-setting rally above $2,500 an ounce looks to have further to run as the Federal Reserve prepares to chop rates, traditional drivers such as lower yields return, and Western investors pile back in.

“Everybody thought the Fed was going to be the last to cut, but now they’re getting in line,” said Jay Hatfield, chief executive officer of Infrastructure Capital Advisors, who recently went long on gold options for the first time in years. Chair Jerome Powell’s Jackson Hole speech — which promised rate cuts  — was a watershed moment for bullion, according to Hatfield.

Bullion has dazzled this year, setting a procession of records that marked out the precious metal as one of the strongest performers among major commodities. Its ascent in the first half came courtesy of strong central-bank buying plus Asian purchases, which offset the drag from a rising US dollar, higher Treasury yields, and outflows from bullion-backed exchange-traded funds. Now all three of those drivers may run in gold’s favor.

“That opportunity cost of holding gold is coming down,” said Rajeev De Mello, global macro portfolio manager at GAMA Asset Management SA. “This very fast decline in real yields, and the weakening of the dollar generally, makes me quite happy to use gold as another currency to be short the dollar.”

So far in 2024, spot gold has rallied by more than a fifth, with banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. saying as far back as April that prices had the scope to hit $2,700 an ounce. After Powell’s roadmap at the Jackson Hole symposium on Friday, US 10-year real yields have now retreated to the lowest since December. That benefits gold as it doesn’t pay interest.

Among investors, interest has become more widespread. Hedge funds and speculators have been adding bullish wagers on Comex — with net-long bullion positions hitting the highest in more than four years, according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.

There are also signs of a revival in demand for gold-backed ETFs. Holdings in SPDR Gold Shares, one of the leading products, have expanded for the eight straight weeks, the longest run of inflows since mid-2020. 

To be sure, even with Western investors warming to the metal, prices may be vulnerable to softening consumption in Asia, where lofty prices have hurt demand. China’s central bank also recently paused its monthly purchases, weakening two of the pillars that helped lift gold in the first half.

For now, Citigroup Inc. sees inflows into ETFs expanding “significantly” over six to 12 months, with demand bolstered by looser monetary policy, as well as a potential increase in volatility amid recessionary risks. Gold may reach $3,000 by mid-2025, the bank said in a note before Powell’s address. Spot bullion was last near $2,525, close to its peak.

The market can expect large ETF flows, as well as ongoing speculator demand, when the Fed actually makes its first rate cut, according to UBS Group AG, which sees prices at $2,600 for the last quarter of 2024. Increasing geopolitical risks should also lift demand for portfolio hedges, said Wayne Gordon, commodities strategist at UBS Global Wealth Management.

“It’s really notable that people are actually starting to move to that physical gold ETF side now,” said Ryan McIntyre, managing partner at Sprott Inc., a Toronto-based precious metals and critical minerals asset manager with $31.1 billion in assets under management. “Buying through the ETFs is going to be a big, big part of gold’s story.”

Latest News

Family offices are losing faith in the dollar and bracing for a world that stays broken, UBS reveals
Family offices are losing faith in the dollar and bracing for a world that stays broken, UBS reveals

The wealthiest investors on earth are quietly reshuffling portfolios for permanent uncertainty, not just another rough patch.

Retirement is the new American Dream, but millions doubt they'll get there
Retirement is the new American Dream, but millions doubt they'll get there

ACLI research reveals middle-class financial resilience rebounding, even as inflation anxiety and a deep savings confidence gap cloud the outlook.

Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.
Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

Robinhood just made a bold move into AI-powered trading for the retail market
Robinhood just made a bold move into AI-powered trading for the retail market

Traders will be able to connect their own third-party AI agents to the brokerage platform.

Jamie Dimon signals up to $20 billion acquisition for JPMorgan
Jamie Dimon signals up to $20 billion acquisition for JPMorgan

The bank's outspoken CEO says it's scanning for deal targets even as geopolitical risks and elevated asset prices cloud the outlook.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.