Downside Ahead For Gold?

 | Feb 17, 2016 05:42AM ET

For months now, the correlation between stocks and crude oil has been discussed ad nauseam.

Excluding the energy sector, the S&P 500 Index typically moves inversely to the price of “black gold.” When oil goes up, stocks go down, and vice versa.

However, an interesting scenario has unfolded over the last few months: Stocks have moved right alongside crude.

In fact, January saw the tightest correlation between the two (96%) in a decade.

This coupling is due to a number of speculative factors: fears of a global slowdown, fears of oil producer defaults – basically fear.

And oil isn’t the only commodity coupling with stocks, either. Indeed, there’s another, even juicier fear-driven correlation taking place…

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The commodity in question is none other than gold, which has enjoyed a colorful relationship with the S&P 500 over the years.

The S&P tracks gold inversely, just as it does with oil. Basically, when stocks tumble, investors run for safe havens: Treasuries, utility stocks, and gold.

But when stocks rally, gold falls. That’s because, on a total return basis, stocks outperform gold handsomely.