Industrial Metals Vs. Gold: No Boom-To-Bust Transition...Yet

 | Jul 20, 2021 01:52AM ET

[This is a modified excerpt from a commentary published at TSI on 18th July 2021]

One of the most useful intermediate-term indicators of the financial/economic landscape is the performance of industrial metals relative to gold as indicated by the GYX/gold ratio. This ratio turns down prior to financial crises and major economic slowdowns and turns up in the early stages of recoveries. It occasionally makes a ‘head fake’ move, but over the 25 years of its history it has never failed to reverse course in a timely manner.

With reference to the following weekly chart, we define “reverse course” to mean cross from above to below or below to above the 50-week MA (the blue line). For example, GYX/gold turned down ahead of the 1998 Russian/LTCM crisis, the 2001-2002 recession and equity bear market, the 2007-2009 Global Financial Crisis, the 2011-2012 European debt crisis, the 2015 yuan-devaluation panic, and the Q4-2018 stock market panic that forced the Fed to do an about-face. Note that after turning down ahead of the Q4-2018 panic it didn’t turn back up until the great reflation trade got underway in Q2-2020.

As an aside, ratios that use gold would not be such reliable indicators of important economic and financial-market trends if the gold price were distorted in a big way by manipulation.