What Would A Fed Hike Mean For Gold?

 | Jun 01, 2016 06:00AM ET

This month, the London Bullion Market Association published a new edition of its quarterly journal called Fed rate-hike cycles .

Between January 1971 and December 2008, there were seven episodes of rate-hike cycles including three or more consecutive increases in the federal funds rate with no intervening cuts. Data shows that gold rallied through five of these cycles and fell through only two of them.

Moreover, the average price gains significantly exceeded the average losses during rate-hike cycles: 133 percent versus 7 percent per each cycle. It suggests that gold is either very resilient to rate hikes or it thrives in the environment of rising interest rates .

However, investors should not draw conclusions too quickly, as the gold market is complex and many factors (not only the Fed rate-hike cycles) affect the price of the yellow metal simultaneously. For example, the price of gold increased the most during rate-hike cycles which accompanied high inflation (between 1971 and mid-1974, as well as between 1976 and 1980).

In the last cycle, from mid-2004 to mid-2007, gold also gained (as one can see in the chart below), but investors should remember that it was during a gold bull market. It was also the period when the U.S. housing bubble began to pop and when gold ETFs were introduced.

Chart 1: The price of gold (blue line, left axis) and the effective federal funds rate (red line, right axis).