What Does Gold Hedge Against?

&#8220-Not inflation&#8221-, the gold critics will shout, in one of their go-to arguments. This is what we hear from CNBC&#8217-s Mark Haines at every possible chance: since 1980, gold has not kept up with the CPI and so shouldn&#8217-t be used as an inflation hedge. One would point out to Mark that this is analogous to arguing for global cooling based on that one 2005 start date. If you pick basically any other start date but the one corresponding to gold&#8217-s 1980 peak, you see something different, even giving CPI a long head start over floating gold prices:

Cumulative Increase Through December 2009&nbsp-
&nbsp-CPIGoldGold/CPI Increase Ratio
From:&nbsp-&nbsp-&nbsp-&nbsp-&nbsp-
Jan-55808.3%3129.5%3.87&nbsp-&nbsp-
Jan-70476.9%3113.9%6.53&nbsp-&nbsp-
Jan-75320.1%514.8%1.61&nbsp-&nbsp-
Jan-80185.0%143.8%0.78&nbsp-&nbsp-
Jan-85105.4%254.2%2.41&nbsp-&nbsp-
Jan-9071.8%176.3%2.45&nbsp-&nbsp-
Jan-9544.5%197.8%4.44&nbsp-&nbsp-
Jan-0028.5%298.5%10.46&nbsp-&nbsp-
Jan-0513.3%155.6%11.74&nbsp-&nbsp-

But in shorter time-frames gold critics do have half a point. Since 2003, on a daily basis, gold returns have only been 12.5% correlated to changes in the inflation rate implied by 10-year TIPs. On a monthly basis, gold returns are 9% correlated to those of the TIPs spread.

We can look back further if we examine the the monthly performance of gold versus year-over-year changes in the CPI index. The CPI index for a given month is released in the subsequent month, so CPI monthly values are shifted forward in this study to correspond to the month of their release. The YoY change in CPI is further assumed to be the market&#8217-s expectation of future inflation. All gold prices here are daily averages based on the London PM fix through December 1974, and Comex/CME spot thereafter.

Ignoring the fact that gold generally rose in this period, it doesn&#8217-t do particularly well when inflation is elevated by this definition. A cut-off of 4% was used because it was the round number that most nearly bisected the 501 months in question, but the pattern holds-up when this parameter and other assumptions are varied:

Monthly Gold Price Changes By Inflation Rate, Apr 1968 &#8211- Dec
2009
&nbsp-SumNumber of MonthsAverage&nbsp-&nbsp-
Months where
inflation:
&nbsp-&nbsp-&nbsp-&nbsp-
&gt- 4%180.4%225&nbsp-0.80%&nbsp-&nbsp-
&lt-= 4%232.3%276&nbsp-0.84%&nbsp-&nbsp-

So what does gold hedge against? Gold does well when real returns are low. You can&#8217-t consider inflation without looking at prevailing rates and growth. The rates used below are the average of daily 10yr constant maturity rates (GS10) within a given month. As Larry David would say, &#8220-pretty &#8230- pretty good&#8221-:

Monthly Gold Price Changes By Real Rate, Apr 1968 &#8211- Dec 2009
&nbsp-SumNumber of MonthsAverage&nbsp-&nbsp-
Months where
real rate:
&nbsp-&nbsp-&nbsp-&nbsp-
&lt- 3%414.0%268&nbsp-1.54%&nbsp-&nbsp-
&gt-= 3%-1.3%233&nbsp--0.01%&nbsp-&nbsp-

3% was used because it is again the round number that most nearly bisects the observations, but it can be varied without changing the essential result. There are also simple ways to define low real returns without a fixed parameter that show similar performance breakdowns with very different distributions of months. Now, these are retrospective studies, not trading systems, but obviously there is little chance that those returns were drawn from populations with the same mean.

It&#8217-s surprising that thoughtful types like Nouriel Roubini and Martin Feldstein have questioned gold&#8217-s inflation hedging, but didn&#8217-t mention this point &#8212- it seems glaring: people hold the relatively useless metal when real rates and opportunity cost are low. This simple point somehow never comes through in the noise surrounding gold: the glib Spam-sagacity vs. the Fall of The Republic, all the go-to arguments.

Clearly there are other factors that may throw the model off for long stretches of time. These may be false positives (e.g. non-dollar weakness) or false negatives (e.g. if gold is monetized to the point that it rises in deflation).

Putting aside the current weakness related to the Euro and elevating risk aversion, since I&#8217-m expecting real rates to be on the low end compared to the late 20th century, my bias is still long gold. If yields should rise, especially if they are driven by vigilance, gold might make less sense.

[Cross-posted with minor changes from Seeking Alpha]

9 thoughts on “What Does Gold Hedge Against?

  1. Niall O'Connor said:

    Jason

    I recall that you said that you were going to trade January Gold? How did you get on with this trade?

  2. Jason Ruspini said:

    Those puts were a loss, but have remained pretty net flat-to-short Ways of getting long yuan like CYB are more interesting to me right now than gold. Volatility has been a lot more interesting lately.

    Getting closer with gold though.. Many buyers near 1050, but if that level breaks it’s not necessarily the end of the world.

    Then again, vigilance seems likely to heat up at some point.

  3. Caveat Bettor said:

    I’m a gold skeptic, as well as a global warming skeptic. On the latter, try starting the argument for global cooling up to 600 million years ago*.

    *http://www.geocraft.com/WVFossils/Carboniferous_climate.html

  4. Jason Ruspini said:

    Yes but more carbon dioxide means higher not lower temperatures, so it’s one of those cases where I would put less weight on historical data.

    By the way, with gold, I am more worried about longer-term inflation implicit in debt/entitlements than a shorter-term monetization of bank reserves, although most gold bulls like to trot out the latter hockey stick chart.

    Also, from a real returns perspective, Eddie’s second chart here looks like a normalized inverse of gold from the late ’60s on, when its price was floated.

    http://www.crossingwallstreet.com/archives/2010/02/the_very_long_v.html

  5. Niall O'Connor said:

    “my bias is still long gold”

    Hmmm, are you dead yet???

  6. Jason Ruspini said:

    Did I not say:

    “have remained pretty net flat-to-short”

    Have my short-term comments not been on the bearish side since the day the drop began in December?

  7. Niall O'Connor said:

    “Gold Futures continued to fall this morning after the IMF said that it would begin selling metal reserves on the open market. This move took many of the so called technical analysts by surprise, as their charts had indicated a pick up in volume and a bounce in the metal’s price. It was also rumoured that a leading Gold Bear had opened a big short position in the metal.”

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