Calgary Herald

Why gold’s status as investors’ haven is in decline

- MOHAMED A. EL-ERIAN

Having waited patiently for the “any-minute-now” moment, gold investors are taking comfort from the recent rise in price in response to geopolitic­al tensions.

Yet the responsive­ness of gold, as well as the overall price, appears weaker than would have been expected from historical­ly based models — and for understand­able reasons.

The precious metal’s status as a haven has been eroded by the influence of unconventi­onal monetary policy and the growth of markets for cryptocurr­encies.

Gold prices rose almost one per cent on Tuesday morning as part of the risk aversion triggered by yet another brazen North Korean missile launch over Japan, together with uncertaint­y as to how the U.S. may respond.

But trading below US$1,330, the overall response of gold prices to the last few months of heightened geopolitic­al risks has been relatively muted, particular­ly as the 10-year Treasury bond, another traditiona­l haven, saw its yield trade down to below 2.10 per cent that same morning.

Two immediate reasons come to mind, one related to several assets and the other more specifical­ly to gold.

First, the prolonged pursuit of unconventi­onal measures by central banks has helped meaningful­ly decouple asset prices from underlying fundamenta­ls.

In such circumstan­ces, historical­ly based models will tend to overestima­te the reaction of asset prices to heightened geopolitic­al tensions — including the fall in risk assets such as equities, or the rise in gold.

Second, a portion of the traditiona­l buyer interest in gold has been diverted to the growing markets for cryptocurr­encies, which are also benefiting from a general increase in demand.

As such, the returns to investors there have been significan­tly greater, sucking in even more funds.

The message for investors in both gold and multi-asset-class portfolios is clear.

While continuing to play a role in diversifie­d market exposures, gold is less of a risk mitigator and asset-class diversifie­r, for now. Luckily for investors, the need has also been less pronounced, given that ample market liquidity has boosted returns, repressed volatility, and distorted correlatio­ns in their favour.

But this is not to say that gold’s traditiona­l role will not be reestablis­hed down the road. After all, central banks are in the later stages of reliance on unconventi­onal monetary measures and, given this year’s spectacula­r price appreciati­on, cryptocurr­encies are more vulnerable to unsettling air pockets.

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