Why isn't gold moving?
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Why isn't gold moving?
If you accept the idea that inflation is all around us, so much so that it's the mainstream talk, then why isn't gold moving?
My PP is down YTD, and the missing piece seems to be gold responding to what appears to be inflation. It rose some during the pandemic, and then came back down.
Maybe there is no inflation?
Maybe crypto is stealing some of gold's market as an inflation hedge?
During the last financial crisis, when the Fed flooded the market with liquidity, gold soared. So what's different now?
My PP is down YTD, and the missing piece seems to be gold responding to what appears to be inflation. It rose some during the pandemic, and then came back down.
Maybe there is no inflation?
Maybe crypto is stealing some of gold's market as an inflation hedge?
During the last financial crisis, when the Fed flooded the market with liquidity, gold soared. So what's different now?
- I Shrugged
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Don't know, but I'm buying.
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
The fact that gold hasn't moved indicates to me that inflation isn't here. Meanwhile, rising interest rates put pressure on gold because gold doesn't pay you to own it
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Short term fear moves it, long term real rates move it
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Gold works in mysterious ways, its wonders to perform.
- mathjak107
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Gold does not respond to normal inflation well at all ..to many other factors effect it .
But it does respond well to real return on cash going negative
But it does respond well to real return on cash going negative
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Agreed on the first point. Regarding the second, real returns on cash have been negative for quite a while now, right? Do real yields just need to be even deeper into negative territory for gold to move up?mathjak107 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 15, 2021 3:39 am Gold does not respond to normal inflation well at all ..to many other factors effect it .
But it does respond well to real return on cash going negative
Harry Brown always said that gold would do well during high inflation, like somewhere up around 5% - 6%. Or maybe gold is just taking a while to react to present conditions much like what happened with long bonds in late 2008.
Been wondering the same thing, so thanks glennds for starting this thread.
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
What do you mean by normal inflation? The conventional measures like CPI, PPI?mathjak107 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 15, 2021 3:39 am Gold does not respond to normal inflation well at all ..to many other factors effect it .
But it does respond well to real return on cash going negative
Please explain,
- buddtholomew
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
If I recall HB said “unexpected inflation” in the 5+ range not 2-3% transitory inflation.
Negative real yields are +ve for gold as a store of value instead of USD.
Negative real yields are +ve for gold as a store of value instead of USD.
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Sounds pretty similar to how long-term Treasury prices behave.
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Normal means not high ..gold has not done well tracking low inflation at all ..glennds wrote: ↑Thu Apr 15, 2021 9:42 amWhat do you mean by normal inflation? The conventional measures like CPI, PPI?mathjak107 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 15, 2021 3:39 am Gold does not respond to normal inflation well at all ..to many other factors effect it .
But it does respond well to real return on cash going negative
Please explain,
See Tyler’s article on portfolio charts on gold for more detail
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Tyler's article on Portfolio Charts does indeed explain gold's role better than anything else I've read - by far. Here's one key quote:
"If you’re only focusing on the superficial inflation claim, then the CPI data clearly suggests that gold is not a reliable inflation hedge. But [Ray] Dalio is no fool, and the annual inflation data does hint at a deeper relationship under the surface.
You see, while inflation alone does not explain gold price movements, it’s a very important ingredient in a different metric that does — real interest rates."
Other posters here will have more insight into recent market movements than I do but the mode this year so far has been risk-on with stocks soaring, interest rates surging and a sharp spike in short-term inflation (accompanied by a much larger spike in inflation-hyping talk). None of this is good for gold, and of course it's been really bad for LTT's.
Meanwhile though the money-printing continues on unabated and no amount of increase in the national debt seems to be outside of consideration. I wouldn't be selling any gold just yet.
https://portfoliocharts.com/2020/08/21/ ... e-of-gold/
"If you’re only focusing on the superficial inflation claim, then the CPI data clearly suggests that gold is not a reliable inflation hedge. But [Ray] Dalio is no fool, and the annual inflation data does hint at a deeper relationship under the surface.
You see, while inflation alone does not explain gold price movements, it’s a very important ingredient in a different metric that does — real interest rates."
Other posters here will have more insight into recent market movements than I do but the mode this year so far has been risk-on with stocks soaring, interest rates surging and a sharp spike in short-term inflation (accompanied by a much larger spike in inflation-hyping talk). None of this is good for gold, and of course it's been really bad for LTT's.
Meanwhile though the money-printing continues on unabated and no amount of increase in the national debt seems to be outside of consideration. I wouldn't be selling any gold just yet.
https://portfoliocharts.com/2020/08/21/ ... e-of-gold/
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Kevin,Kevin K. wrote: ↑Thu Apr 15, 2021 2:53 pm Tyler's article on Portfolio Charts does indeed explain gold's role better than anything else I've read - by far. Here's one key quote:
"If you’re only focusing on the superficial inflation claim, then the CPI data clearly suggests that gold is not a reliable inflation hedge. But [Ray] Dalio is no fool, and the annual inflation data does hint at a deeper relationship under the surface.
You see, while inflation alone does not explain gold price movements, it’s a very important ingredient in a different metric that does — real interest rates."
Other posters here will have more insight into recent market movements than I do but the mode this year so far has been risk-on with stocks soaring, interest rates surging and a sharp spike in short-term inflation (accompanied by a much larger spike in inflation-hyping talk). None of this is good for gold, and of course it's been really bad for LTT's.
Meanwhile though the money-printing continues on unabated and no amount of increase in the national debt seems to be outside of consideration. I wouldn't be selling any gold just yet.
https://portfoliocharts.com/2020/08/21/ ... e-of-gold/
Thanks, I can accept basically everything you're saying. I think sometimes the economy does not transition cleanly and discretely from one condition to another. There can be a phasing going on, and it could turn out that gold or another part of the portfolio will rise to the front but it will take a little time. I worry sometimes about the PP because modern monetary theory in the way that central banks practice it now was not happening when HB devised the whole concept. I'm not suggesting yet that the permanent portfolio is obsolete, but I find myself paying closer attention these days looking for confirmation that it isn't. Patience.
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Hi Glen,glennds wrote: ↑Thu Apr 15, 2021 9:37 pmKevin,Kevin K. wrote: ↑Thu Apr 15, 2021 2:53 pm Tyler's article on Portfolio Charts does indeed explain gold's role better than anything else I've read - by far. Here's one key quote:
"If you’re only focusing on the superficial inflation claim, then the CPI data clearly suggests that gold is not a reliable inflation hedge. But [Ray] Dalio is no fool, and the annual inflation data does hint at a deeper relationship under the surface.
You see, while inflation alone does not explain gold price movements, it’s a very important ingredient in a different metric that does — real interest rates."
Other posters here will have more insight into recent market movements than I do but the mode this year so far has been risk-on with stocks soaring, interest rates surging and a sharp spike in short-term inflation (accompanied by a much larger spike in inflation-hyping talk). None of this is good for gold, and of course it's been really bad for LTT's.
Meanwhile though the money-printing continues on unabated and no amount of increase in the national debt seems to be outside of consideration. I wouldn't be selling any gold just yet.
https://portfoliocharts.com/2020/08/21/ ... e-of-gold/
Thanks, I can accept basically everything you're saying. I think sometimes the economy does not transition cleanly and discretely from one condition to another. There can be a phasing going on, and it could turn out that gold or another part of the portfolio will rise to the front but it will take a little time. I worry sometimes about the PP because modern monetary theory in the way that central banks practice it now was not happening when HB devised the whole concept. I'm not suggesting yet that the permanent portfolio is obsolete, but I find myself paying closer attention these days looking for confirmation that it isn't. Patience.
Thanks for your thoughtful comments. I share your concerns about the endless money printing by central banks. I also doubt Browne would've prescribed 25% in cash paying nothing and an additional 25% in LTT's with laughable nominal returns and close-to-zero real. Still the robustness of the PP under all kinds of market conditions and the fundamental logic of owning truly uncorrelated assets makes sense to me and as a risk-averse retiree with way too small of a nest egg I don't plan on straying far from some iteration of the PP (GB in my case albeit with ITT's instead of the barbell).
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
It'll be a genius play if you have a 20 year time horizon. I do wonder about how crypto's will affect gold though, because I feel like essentially crypto (in this case BTC) is essentially gold. IMHO - In golds case its commodity value is it's beauty and in the case of a crypto is its portability.
- I Shrugged
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Moving now. it's up a hundred bucks over recent lows.
- vnatale
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Above provided by: Vinny, who always says: "I only regret that I have but one lap to give to my cats." AND "I'm a more-is-more person."
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
It's good again.
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
I have never questioned the PP until now. It's easy to say that I am falling into the "this time it's different" trap but in some instances this time really IS different. I am not sure putting 50% of my funds into cash at 0% and long term govt bonds at historically low rates is a great idea. I am closer than ever to going back to my grandparent's old time investing ways. No Bitcoin. No NFTs. No Modern Portfolio Theory. Back to basics. 10% of my funds in cash and the rest in "safe" dividend paying stocks like JNJ or UNP etc. I will ignore the daily fluctuations, live off of the (hopefully) increasing dividends and leave the principal for my heirs. That is my plan. But I haven't pulled the trigger on it yet. I am sure the moment that I do long bonds will take off, although I don't know what the catalyst for that would be right now.glennds wrote: ↑Thu Apr 15, 2021 9:37 pmKevin,Kevin K. wrote: ↑Thu Apr 15, 2021 2:53 pm Tyler's article on Portfolio Charts does indeed explain gold's role better than anything else I've read - by far. Here's one key quote:
"If you’re only focusing on the superficial inflation claim, then the CPI data clearly suggests that gold is not a reliable inflation hedge. But [Ray] Dalio is no fool, and the annual inflation data does hint at a deeper relationship under the surface.
You see, while inflation alone does not explain gold price movements, it’s a very important ingredient in a different metric that does — real interest rates."
Other posters here will have more insight into recent market movements than I do but the mode this year so far has been risk-on with stocks soaring, interest rates surging and a sharp spike in short-term inflation (accompanied by a much larger spike in inflation-hyping talk). None of this is good for gold, and of course it's been really bad for LTT's.
Meanwhile though the money-printing continues on unabated and no amount of increase in the national debt seems to be outside of consideration. I wouldn't be selling any gold just yet.
https://portfoliocharts.com/2020/08/21/ ... e-of-gold/
Thanks, I can accept basically everything you're saying. I think sometimes the economy does not transition cleanly and discretely from one condition to another. There can be a phasing going on, and it could turn out that gold or another part of the portfolio will rise to the front but it will take a little time. I worry sometimes about the PP because modern monetary theory in the way that central banks practice it now was not happening when HB devised the whole concept. I'm not suggesting yet that the permanent portfolio is obsolete, but I find myself paying closer attention these days looking for confirmation that it isn't. Patience.
Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Ditto. I've been fully invested in the PP for over 10 years and have never questioned it until now.jalanlong wrote: ↑Thu Apr 22, 2021 3:02 pm I have never questioned the PP until now. It's easy to say that I am falling into the "this time it's different" trap but in some instances this time really IS different. I am not sure putting 50% of my funds into cash at 0% and long term govt bonds at historically low rates is a great idea. [...] But I haven't pulled the trigger on it yet. I am sure the moment that I do long bonds will take off, although I don't know what the catalyst for that would be right now.
I'm getting much closer to pulling the trigger, though. My plan at the moment is simply to shift my LTT allocation to stocks, so my PP would become 50% stocks, 25% gold, and 25% cash. It would be a bit more volatile than the PP, but not significantly so.
I just keep asking myself how I can justify holding LTTs when their max upside (assuming a 0% rate floor) is now ~70%, their max downside is much bigger, and we're virtually guaranteed to have double-digit inflation (actual inflation, not fake CPI-based inflation) for years going forward due to the trillions of dollars being printed right now. And I keep reaching the conclusion that I just can't.
But yes... the moment I pull the trigger and convert my LTTs to stocks, the stock market will temporarily tank and LTTs will temporarily spike. Guaranteed. I guess I just need to take the plunge.
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
“Jumping from the frying pan and into the fire” comes to mind when considering a switch from LTT to stocks. Perhaps consider shortening duration and choosing something in the 5-7 or 7-10 year range.Tortoise wrote: ↑Thu Apr 22, 2021 4:27 pmDitto. I've been fully invested in the PP for over 10 years and have never questioned it until now.jalanlong wrote: ↑Thu Apr 22, 2021 3:02 pm I have never questioned the PP until now. It's easy to say that I am falling into the "this time it's different" trap but in some instances this time really IS different. I am not sure putting 50% of my funds into cash at 0% and long term govt bonds at historically low rates is a great idea. [...] But I haven't pulled the trigger on it yet. I am sure the moment that I do long bonds will take off, although I don't know what the catalyst for that would be right now.
I'm getting much closer to pulling the trigger, though. My plan at the moment is simply to shift my LTT allocation to stocks, so my PP would become 50% stocks, 25% gold, and 25% cash. It would be a bit more volatile than the PP, but not significantly so.
I just keep asking myself how I can justify holding LTTs when their max upside (assuming a 0% rate floor) is now ~70%, their max downside is much bigger, and we're virtually guaranteed to have double-digit inflation (actual inflation, not fake CPI-based inflation) for years going forward due to the trillions of dollars being printed right now. And I keep reaching the conclusion that I just can't.
But yes... the moment I pull the trigger and convert my LTTs to stocks, the stock market will temporarily tank and LTTs will temporarily spike. Guaranteed. I guess I just need to take the plunge.
Inflation is not guaranteed and printing certainly hasn’t resulted in much over the last 13 years.
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
This must mean the PP's time to shine is soon.
Sentiment is so low for gold and bonds.
I too am having a harder time stomaching it while also just wanting to simplify.
If you are still accumulating then just leave what you have in place and just put new contributions in preferred assets.
That is my plan. Then if there is a big drop that comes to this never ending bull market you can go all in then.
I was thinking if LTT got close to 5% I would go almost all in on them. I don't know what price gold would have to be for an all in.
Sentiment is so low for gold and bonds.
I too am having a harder time stomaching it while also just wanting to simplify.
If you are still accumulating then just leave what you have in place and just put new contributions in preferred assets.
That is my plan. Then if there is a big drop that comes to this never ending bull market you can go all in then.
I was thinking if LTT got close to 5% I would go almost all in on them. I don't know what price gold would have to be for an all in.
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
I'm seeing an increasing amount of stories (or videos) saying that although we're seeing price increases in some areas, we are not actually seeing inflation. Instead, we are on the verge of deflation. Of course I realize that for every one of those I click on, The Algorithm shows me four more.
I don't pretend to really know what's going on, nor do I assume the people I read or watch do either. But I'm not ready to do anything drastic like sell my bonds. All I can do is stay the course and maybe read about bond convexity.
I don't pretend to really know what's going on, nor do I assume the people I read or watch do either. But I'm not ready to do anything drastic like sell my bonds. All I can do is stay the course and maybe read about bond convexity.
- Mark Leavy
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
I’m also sticking with my bond allocation.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Thu Apr 22, 2021 4:55 pm I'm seeing an increasing amount of stories (or videos) saying that although we're seeing price increases in some areas, we are not actually seeing inflation. Instead, we are on the verge of deflation. Of course I realize that for every one of those I click on, The Algorithm shows me four more.
I don't pretend to really know what's going on, nor do I assume the people I read or watch do either. But I'm not ready to do anything drastic like sell my bonds. All I can do is stay the course and maybe read about bond convexity.
But this was on my company chat today. Completely non political and in a non sexy tech niche.
- buddtholomew
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Re: Why isn't gold moving?
Golds always the last to know hahaMark Leavy wrote: ↑Thu Apr 22, 2021 5:21 pmI’m also sticking with my bond allocation.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Thu Apr 22, 2021 4:55 pm I'm seeing an increasing amount of stories (or videos) saying that although we're seeing price increases in some areas, we are not actually seeing inflation. Instead, we are on the verge of deflation. Of course I realize that for every one of those I click on, The Algorithm shows me four more.
I don't pretend to really know what's going on, nor do I assume the people I read or watch do either. But I'm not ready to do anything drastic like sell my bonds. All I can do is stay the course and maybe read about bond convexity.
But this was on my company chat today. Completely non political and in a non sexy tech niche.
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