When Will Rising Yields Benefit Gold?

 | Oct 31, 2017 12:57AM ET

Over the past two years, gold has been inversely correlated to bond yields. In a low inflation environment, falling bond yields drive real interest rates lower which benefits gold. Conversely, rising yields are generally negative for gold.

When long-term yields exploded higher in the second half of 2016, gold declined hard. Now with long-term yields threatening a potential major move higher, gold and gold stocks have sold off and there is a risk of further losses. However, at some point rising yields can push gold higher.

To answer the question of when we must understand what drives gold.

Gold performs best amid falling or negative real interest rates. That occurs when inflation is rising faster than interest rates or when interest rates are falling faster than inflation.

In terms of the yield curve, a steepening curve is bullish for gold. Two analysts I enjoy reading (Steve Saville ) write about this frequently. Steve Saville recently wrote that a steepening yield curve reflects either increasing inflation expectations or risk aversion linked to declining confidence in the economy or financial system. The curve can steepen due to rising inflation or plummeting interest rates and in particular short-term rates.

The chart below, which plots gold and the yield curve (bottom) highlights recent periods of a steepening yield curve. Both periods were driven by a sharp decrease in short-term yields.