The Case for Gold as an Investment—Part I of III
by Les Nemethy and Sergey Glekov

The world is a much riskier place than most people realize. A very incomplete list of just some of the possible risks in the global geopolitical system include:
  • China challenging US hegemony
  • Russia trying to regain some of the old Soviet glory by challenging the status quo, from Ukraine to Syria
  • The rise of populism, nationalism, illiberalism, the erosion of tolerance and “win-win” thinking, from Turkey to the Philippines and from the US to Hungary
  • Global debt levels spiraling out of control (see my previous article), with bubbles emerging in China, Japan, Italy, etc.
  • New and previously unimagined forms of hostility, from potentially destabilizing technologies like artificial intelligence to hybrid warfare
  • BREXIT
The lives of most well-to-do people (e.g. investors) in the world is enshrouded in normalcy.  There is probably a natural human tendency or bias: unless we feel things on our own skin, we tend to ignore them. One could argue that risk in the world is underpriced. Enter gold. For centuries, gold has been considered the great hedge. This article will focus on the value of gold as a hedge. My next article will analyze global supply and demand for gold. And the third and last article in the series will look at different methods of holding gold (physical gold, ETF’s, gold miners, royalties, etc.) and summarize the case for holding gold. Exhibit 1 demonstrates quite graphically that when equity and debt markets are in crisis, gold performs quite well, or at least better: Exhibit 1: S&P 500, US Treasuries and Gold during 10 crisis episodes over the past 30 years1
Start End S&P 500 index U.S. Treasuries Gold
1987 crash 8/25/87 10/19/87 -33.2% -7.2% 5.0%
Iraq invades Kuwait 7/17/90 10/12/90 -17.6% -0.4% 7.6%
Asia crisis 10/7/97 10/28/97 -6.2% 0.0% -4.6%
Russia/Long-Term Capital Management crisis 7/20/98 10/8/98 -18.7% 5.3% 1.2%
Sept. 11 9/10/01 10/11/02 -22.3% 11.2% 16.6%
Global financial crisis 10/11/07 3/6/09 -54.5% 15.8% 25.6%
2010 euro zone crisis and flash crash 4/20/10 7/1/10 -14.5% 4.5% 5.1%
U.S. sovereign debt downgrade 7/25/11 8/9/11 -12.3% 3.6% 7.8%
Taper tantrum 5/22/13 6/24/13 -4.8% -2.0% -6.4%
China worries 8/18/15 2/11/16 -11.8% 3.5% 11.5%
Average -19.6% 3.4% 6.9%
Exhibit 2 shows that gold has low or negative correlation with other major asset classes: Exhibit 2: Correlation between gold and other asset classes2 The following chart sets out in easily visible fashion how returns on gold and the Dow Jones Industrial Average differ dramatically, decade by decade, over the approximately last five decades. Exhibit 3: Correlation of DJIA and Gold, by decade, 1971-2018
Years Correlation Return
Gold DJIA
1971-1980 -0.102 1479% 16%
1981-1999 -0.590 -52% 1092%
2000-2011 0.325 458% 11%
2012-2018 -0.538 -20% 98%
For those readers who might not remember—the 1970’s was a tough decade, characterized by the oil crisis of 1973, the recession of 1973-1975, high unemployment, and a terrible period of stagflation.  In the 1980’s the back of stagflation was broken, and the 1990’s saw perhaps the most sustained growth of the American economy in the modern era. Exhibit 4 below looks at the relative returns of gold vs. DJIA since 1971:  You can make arguments for either being the better investment—depending on the holding period you choose.  Over the last six years gold has clearly been the loser, but over most time horizons since 1971, gold would be the winner. Exhibit 4: Gold vs Dow returns since 1971 Exhibit 5 below shows the ratio of the DJIA to the price of gold, since the 1920’s. Exhibit 5: Dow to Gold ratio3 Note the huge variation of the ratio: from nearly 1 to 1 in January of 1980 (when the price of gold was USD 843 and the DJIA was also at 873, to a high in August of 1999, when the DJIA was 11,326 and gold was only 253 (e.g. a ratio of approximately 45:1).  We are currently somewhere near the midrange, of 20:1. I trust this article makes the case that gold deserves a place in most investment portfolios based on its ability to hedge the portfolio. In other words, with a certain amount of gold in your portfolio, you can enjoy a higher level of return for a given amount of risk.  According to the World Gold Council, adding up to 10% gold to the average pension fund portfolio would have both increased returns and reduced volatility, resulting in higher risk-adjusted returns4 The result would probably be similar for your portfolio too.
1Bloomberg – Is Gold Really a Good Hedge?
2World Gold Council, based on weekly returns between January 1987 and June 2018. Economic expansions and contractions as determined by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER).
3Longtermtrends – Dow-Gold Ratio
4World Gold Council – The Relevance of Gold as a Strategic Asset
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