Here's 1 Reason This Gold Bull Run Likely Still Has Legs

 | Apr 09, 2024 09:24AM ET


Gold has surged to record highs of over $1,350 per ounce, and there is reason to believe this bull run has plenty of legs left.

Gold dipped below $2,000 for the last time in mid-February. Since that time, it has gained nearly 18 percent. But despite the rally, a lot of investors in the West have not jumped on the bandwagon – yet.

In fact, pundits on financial news networks have been poo-pooing this gold bull run all the way up. On March 8, CNBC featured a commodity analyst urging people to sell gold. Since then, the price is up over 8 percent.

You can see that institutional investors have been slow to jump into the rally by looking at the flow of gold into and out of exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

A gold ETF is backed by metal owned and stored by the issuer. In most cases, investing in an ETF does not entitle you to any amount of physical gold. You own a share of the ETF, not gold itself. The movement of gold into and out of ETFs can have a significant impact on supply and demand dynamics.

Even with the price of gold climbing rapidly, there are still outflows of metal from gold-backed funds. The last time ETFs added gold on net globally was October 2023, and that was a one-off event.