2 Charts To Explain Gold's Movement

 | Sep 09, 2016 06:10AM ET

Here is a brief excerpt, with updated charts, from a recent commentary posted at TSI.

If you read some gold-focused web sites you could come away with the belief that movements in the gold price are almost completely random, depending more on the whims/abilities of evil manipulators and the news of the day than on genuine fundamental drivers. The following two charts can be viewed as cures for this wrongheaded belief.

The first chart compares the performance of the US$ gold price with the performance of the bond/dollar ratio (the T-Bond price divided by the Dollar Index). The charts are almost identical, which means that the gold price has been moving in line with a quantity that takes into account changes in interest rates, inflation expectations and currency exchange rates.

The second chart shows that the US$ gold price has had a strong positive correlation with the yen’s/US$ exchange rate. As we’ve explained in the past, gold tends to have a stronger relationship with the yen than with any other currency because the yen carry trade makes the yen behave like a safe haven.