Why Gold Isn’t Going Up (But Oil Is)

 | Sep 29, 2021 12:19AM ET

h2 All Inflation Isn’t The Same

Demand-side inflation is a surfeit of money, making money cheaper and everything else (including gold) more expensive. What we have now is supply-side inflation. We made this point earlier this month Supply-Side Inflation Hits Home, in which we referred to economist Alan Cole's soon-to-be-retired Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren, speaking about a previous bout of supply-side inflation in 2011:

"Because my analysis suggests that recent food and oil price increases have their roots in concerns about wheat harvests in Russia and oil production in Libya and the like, I do not believe that monetary policy is the appropriate tool to respond to these disruptions. While many observers see food and energy prices rising and assume the Fed should tighten policy – raise the cost of money and credit – to head off inflation, I would suggest taking a step back and recognizing that tighter U.S. monetary policy will do nothing to stabilize Libyan oil production, reduce uncertainty about political stability in the rest of the Middle East, or increase the wheat harvest in Russia."

As Cole pointed out, “COVID-19 has created a similar outcome, just with different supply-side bottlenecks.”

h2 Gold Versus Oil And Natural Gas/h2

An obvious difference between gold and oil and natural gas is when oil and natural gas are consumed, they’re gone, whereas practically all the gold ever mined on earth is still around. So supply-side bottlenecks caused by COVID had a much bigger impact on oil supplies, for example, than gold.

For a while, this was partly masked by declining demand for oil due to lockdowns (fewer workers commuting, etc.), but the supply bottlenecks were significant. For example, at time of writing, the A Structural Inflation Shock ). But if you didn’t buy them then, it wasn’t too late to make some gains. Both appeared in our top ten names at the end of August.