Futures Keep Dogging Gold

 | Sep 09, 2022 12:34PM ET

Gold continues to languish near major lows after a rough summer, deeply out of favor with traders. Oddly this leading alternative investment seems oblivious to the first inflation super-spike since the 1970s. That should be driving big gold demand, fueling a major upleg. But that classic inflationary response has been temporarily delayed by heavy-to-extreme gold futures selling. When that reverses to buying, gold will soar.

As everyone running a household or business knows, inflation is raging out of control. Not even lowballed government statistics can hide it. The monthly US Consumer Price Index has averaged blistering 8.3% year-over-year gains so far in 2022. That’s 4.6x 2019’s +1.8%-YoY monthly average, the last normal year before the pandemic-lockdown stock panic and its extensive aftermath. This June, the CPI soared 9.1% YoY.

That proved its hottest print since way back in November 1981, a staggering 40.6-year high! That’s despite today’s CPI being way watered-down compared to the 1970s one, extensively understating real inflation. Americans sure wish prices were only climbing 9%ish annually, but the grim reality out there is at least double to triple that. With such extreme inflation, gold should be soaring on huge investment demand.

Gold skyrocketed during the last similar inflation super-spikes in the 1970s. In the first, the CPI blasted from +2.7% YoY to +12.3% over 30 months into December 1974. Gold’s monthly average prices from trough to peak CPI months launched 196.6% higher! During the second, the CPI exploded from +4.9% YoY to +14.8% in 40 months, climaxing in March 1980. Gold’s monthly-average prices were a moonshot, up 322.4%!

If today’s CPI still used its far-more-honest 1970s methodology, headline inflation would be about double-reported levels. Gold’s stunning disconnect from today’s raging inflation is troubling, leaving the great majority of traders forgetting about that 1970s precedent. After suffering one of its worst summers in modern bull-market years, gold has largely been left-for-dead. Instead of flocking back, investors are fleeing.

This vexing gold impotence is surely evident in this chart updated from my latest of early July. It normalizes gold prices during modern bul market summers, the indexing price action to May closes. Gold’s average summer performances between 2001 to 2012 and 2016 to 2021 are rendered in red. Superimposed in dark blue are 2022’s anomalously-weak technicals, which have been ugly.