Gold Thrives In Rate-Hike Cycles

 | Feb 18, 2022 12:51PM ET

Gold futures speculators’ most-feared hobgoblin is Fed-rate-hike cycles. These super-leveraged traders wielding outsized influence on gold prices flee in terror when rate hikes loom. The resulting heavy selling hammers gold sharply lower, damaging sentiment. But these myopic speculators apparently have no history books, as gold actually thrives during Fed-rate-hike cycles! They’ve proven very bullish for this asset.

In mid-June 2021, the Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee responsible for setting this central bank’s monetary policy met in one of its eight scheduled meetings per year. The FOMC didn’t even hint at rate hikes, but every other meeting is accompanied by a Summary of Economic Projections of individual top Fed officials. Their future federal-funds-rate expectations are detailed in its so-called dot plot.

Fully 2.5 years after the last FFR hike, just a third of those Fed decisionmakers were looking for maybe two quarter-point hikes way out into year-end 2023. Despite that being an eternity away in market time, gold-futures speculators panicked. Their extreme long-contract dumping crushed gold 5.2% lower over three days, spawning serious bearish psychology! These guys assume Fed rate hikes are bad news for gold.

Then in early August after a better-than-expected monthly US jobs report upped Fed-rate-hike odds, the same gold-futures speculators responded with epic short selling. That slammed gold down another 4.1% in just two trading days! Later in mid-September a big upside surprise in monthly US retail sales also pressuring the Fed to start hiking shook lose more heavy gold-futures selling, forcing gold 2.2% lower that day.

The examples are legion of these excitable traders puking out huge bouts of leveraged selling battering gold on Fed-rate-hike fears. That even seems logical on the surface. Gold yields nothing, so higher rates pushing up yields on competing US-dollar-denominated bonds should leave the yellow metal looking less attractive right? The problem is hard facts slaughter this flawed thesis, gold thrives during Fed-rate-hike cycles.

The same irrational paranoia from gold-futures speculators plagued gold in late 2015 heading into the Fed’s maiden hike of its last cycle in mid-December that year. So leading into that I decided to updated that research thread again in late March 2017. Now we’re staring down the loaded barrels of another imminent Fed-rate-hike cycle.

The modern era of monetary policy began in 1971, when the US dollar went fully fiat being completely severed from the gold standard. So this past half-century, the 51.2 years since that fateful pivot year commenced, are the extensive study period. This research is somewhat challenging, as the further back in time the more sketchy historical data gets. The Fed maintains extensive but often-changing datasets.

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Getting gold prices is easy, but finding the exact days where the FOMC changed its federal-funds-rate target in regular or emergency meetings decades ago is problematic. In earlier iterations of this research I used New York Fed documents detailing FFR changes and dates. But in the five years since that last update, the St. Louis Fed has published a far-more-thorough and seemingly-better daily record of FFR targets.

So I switched over to that dataset, integrated it into our spreadsheets, and re-ran all this analysis from scratch. The result was claimed dates of a handful of FOMC meetings either starting or ending hiking cycles way back in the 1970s and 1980s changed by a few weeks or so. That affected their durations, thus gold’s price performances over those particular spans. The ultimate impact on this research was immaterial.

But it did slightly change gold’s average gains and losses during Fed-rate-hike cycles compared to my March-2017 update. The definition of a Fed-rate-hike cycle remains the same, three-or-more consecutive federal-funds-rate-target increases by the FOMC with no interrupting decreases. It’s hard to argue that a lone hike or even two isolated hikes bracketed by cuts makes a cycle. The Fed has occasionally done both.

Since 1971, the FOMC hiked once before cutting six times. It boosted the FFR twice in a row before reversing those rate hikes another half-dozen times. But there have been fully twelve real Fed-rate-hike cycles comprised of three-or-more uninterrupted FFR increases over that long span. That encompassed all possible gold environments, bulls and bears, rampant herd greed and fear, and the whole gamut of inflation.

So if gold futures speculators are right that Fed rate hikes are a dire bearish threat to gold, the past dozen Fed-rate-hike cycles would prove that out. But these traders are dead-wrong, blinded by myopia from the super-short time horizons their extreme leverage requires for survival. Despite being derided as a sterile asset because of its lack of yield, the FOMC raising its federal-funds rate has proven very bullish for gold!

These charts reveal that heretical truth. They superimpose daily gold prices over both the FOMC’s actual federal-funds-rate target and the daily effective FFR since 1971. This market FFR fluctuates around that target, requiring the Federal Reserve to actively manipulate interest rates through open-market buying and selling of bonds to force rates in line. Modern computerized markets have made that much easier.

Each Fed-rate-hike cycle is highlighted, with key stats noted. They include total federal-funds-rate hikes in basis points, gold’s exact gains between its close the day before each cycle’s first hike to the day of its final hike, how many hikes in each cycle, and each cycle’s duration in months between its maiden and terminal hike. Average FFR hikes within cycles are also noted, across both their total increases and durations.

Since a half-century of all this data wouldn’t fit legibly in one chart, it is spread out across two. Frightened gold-futures speculators should stop reading here, lest this heterodox historical record shatters your false worldview. For everyone else capable of handling the truth, gold and thus gold-stock portfolio allocations should be greatly upped when the Fed is threatening and executing hikes. Gold thrives during Fed-rate-hike cycles!