Gold suffered
heavy selling in early March leading into the Fed’s latest rate
hike. Speculators frantically dumped gold futures ahead of the
Fed’s meeting as implied rate-hike odds soared. This is nothing
new. This key group of traders has long feared Fed-rate-hike
cycles, convinced they are the mortal nemesis of zero-yielding
gold. But this view is highly irrational, as history proves gold
actually thrives in rate-hike cycles!
The Federal
Reserve’s primary and dominant tool for setting monetary policy is
its target for the federal-funds rate. Commercial banks are
required to maintain reserve balances at the Fed, with necessary
levels fluctuating daily based on each bank’s underlying business
activity. So banks with surplus reserves can lend them on an
overnight basis to other banks running deficits through the
federal-funds market.
The interest rate
at which these transactions happen is the federal-funds rate.
But the importance of the FFR extends far beyond that specialized
inter-bank market. This critical interest rate is effectively the
baseline from which all other US interest rates are set! So this
small FFR tail wags the giant dog of the price of money across the
entire US economy. The prevailing FFR levels affect virtually
everything else.
Federal-funds
futures trade to enable hedging and speculation on future FFR-target
changes by the Fed’s monetary-policy-setting Federal Open Market
Committee, which meets 8 times per year. All this futures trading
collectively implies traders’ perceived odds of the FOMC hiking or
cutting its FFR target at its coming meetings. Gold-futures
speculators watch these futures-implied Fed-rate-hike odds like
hawks.
Back in late
February, these odds of the Fed raising rates at its mid-March
meeting were running at just 22%. The FOMC doesn’t want to surprise
and shock markets, which risks igniting major selloffs in both bonds
and stocks. So it doesn’t boost its FFR target unless a rate hike
is universally expected, with market odds running well over 70%
leading into a meeting. At 22% odds, gold was near $1264 on
February 27th.
But then top Fed
officials began aggressively jawboning on a potential March rate
hike. They started a concerted and relentless campaign to convince
markets that a rate hike was likely at the FOMC’s March 15th
meeting. In just 4 trading days, those futures-implied
rate-hike odds nearly quadrupled to 80%! It was an unprecedented
blindingly-fast massive shift in perceptions, blowing past that 70%
hiking threshold.
By March 9th,
those odds were running 91% which was nearly certain. With the
markets suddenly so convinced another rate hike was coming, the FOMC
would be foolish to squander that opportunity. In that short
9-trading-day span where rate-hike odds skyrocketed from 22% to 91%,
gold plunged 4.5% on very-heavy selling by futures speculators.
There is nothing these guys fear more than Fed rate hikes!
The same thing
happened leading into the previous rate hike in mid-December 2016.
Over the 6-week span from the prior FOMC meeting to that hiking one,
gold plunged 10.1%. That span encompassed the election, so the
resulting Trumphoria stock-market surge driving a
gold mass exodus
was a bigger factor. But
futures
speculators still fled on rate-hike fears. The same
thing happened a year earlier with no election.
The Fed hiked
rates for the first time in 9.5 years in mid-December 2015. Over
the 7 weeks between the preceding FOMC meeting
warning of a
likely hike and that hiking one, gold plunged a similar 9.1%. I
could go on and on. Recent years have seen many examples of heavy
gold-futures selling arising on hawkish FOMC statements, Fed
officials’ hawkish FFR forecasts, and hawkish jawboning by these
guys.
Gold-futures
speculators have even rushed for the exits on strong US economic
data supporting more-hawkish stances by the Fed! Nothing influences
gold-futures trading more than what these speculators expect the Fed
to do with its federal-funds-rate target. And unfortunately their
gold-futures trading has a
wildly-disproportionate impact on prevailing gold prices. Gold
is quite literally hostage to Fed
expectations!
The futures
speculators’ logic is simple and apparently sound. Gold yields
nothing, making it a “sterile investment”. Thus investors are more
likely to want to own it when prevailing interest rates are low.
But as Fed rate hikes force all interest rates higher, gold becomes
relatively less attractive. Higher yields on other assets entice
investors to shift their allocations away from gold. So gold
investment demand wanes.
If this
rate-hikes-are-bad-for-gold thesis that’s universally believed today
is true, history would prove it out. But it doesn’t.
Between January 1970 and January 1980, gold skyrocketed 2332%
higher. During that exact span, the federal-funds rate averaged a
stupendously-high-by-today’s-standards 7.1%! And all the while gold
still yielded zero, just like it always has. Yet gold still soared
in a gargantuan secular bull.
Between April 2001
and August 2011, gold soared up 640% in another secular bull.
Despite the advent of the Fed’s wildly-unprecedented
zero-interest-rate policy back in mid-December 2008, over that span
the FFR still averaged 2.1%. That’s far
higher than today’s 0.9% levels deeply feared by gold-futures
speculators. Clearly the idea that rate hikes and higher prevailing
rates spell doom for gold hasn’t proven true.
Back in late 2015
leading into an expected first Fed rate hike in nearly a decade, I
did a
comprehensive study on how gold performed in past
Fed-rate-hike cycles. I had never seen one before, and needed
to understand how this gold-and-FFR relationship worked
historically. So I downloaded nearly a half-century of daily
federal-funds-rate data directly from the Fed itself, and merged it
into a gold-price spreadsheet.
Amazingly the FOMC
had changed its FFR target a whopping 251 times in that
45-year span from early 1971 to before its first recent hike in
mid-December 2015! Since the FOMC meets 8 times per year, that
equates to about 360 meetings which implies the FFR target was
changed at well over 2/3rds of them. But that’s misleading, as the
FOMC calls emergency unscheduled meetings in exceptionally-volatile
markets.
Since gold-futures
speculators are convinced Fed rate hikes are kryptonite for gold, I
scoured decades of the Fed’s historical FOMC statements and FFR data
to find all the hikes. In order to be considered a rate-hike
cycle, multiple sequential hikes without intervening FFR cuts
are required. 6 times between early 1971 and late 2015, the Fed had
made lone rate hikes that were bracketed by cuts. Those aren’t
cycles.
The Fed’s
vacillation didn’t stop there. 6 additional times the FOMC raised
its target FFR twice back-to-back before it was reduced again. It’s
hard to argue that two hikes make a cycle. The most-generous
definition possible for a Fed-rate-hike cycle is 3 or more
consecutive FFR increases with no interrupting decreases. By
this conservative metric, the Fed had executed fully 11 rate-hike
cycles between 1971 and 2015.
Interestingly
March 2017’s latest rate hike made for the third one since December
2015, which formally confirmed we are now in the Fed’s 12th
rate-hike cycle since the early 1970s! That, along with gold’s
sharp early-March selloff leading into this latest hike, prompted me
to revisit this critical research. How has gold actually performed
historically during the exact spans of all the previous
Fed-rate-hike cycles?
If the futures
speculators are right that Fed rate hikes are bad for gold, history
would clearly show it. Yet the exact opposite has proven true!
These charts highlight every Fed-rate-hike cycle in modern history
in light red. These cycles are defined by the FOMC’s FFR targets,
which don’t always perfectly match the troughs and peaks in the
federal-funds rate because the Fed actually doesn’t directly
control the FFR.
It is technically
a free-market interest rate determined by federal-funds supply and
demand. The FOMC sets an FFR target, and then attempts to
actively manipulate the FFR to it with open-market operations
directly buying and selling in the federal-funds market. While the
Fed has become more sophisticated in bending the FFR to its will
over the decades, there have been significant deviations from
targeted levels.
These updated
charts include both the actual federal-funds rate in light red with
the FOMC’s FFR target on top in dark red. Depending on market
conditions, it can take tens of billions of dollars of Fed trading
to force the free-market FFR to converge with the FOMC’s target.
Gold is superimposed over all this FFR data in blue. Gold-futures
speculators need to seriously study this history totally
contradicting their worldview.
Finally a
half-dozen key data points are noted for each Fed-rate-hike cycle.
Starting at the top is the total increase in basis points,
hundredths of a percent. That’s followed by the number of
individual hikes in each cycle, and their average basis-point
increases per hike and per month. Next comes the duration of each
Fed-rate-hike cycle in months, followed by gold’s
price performance during each cycle’s
exact span.
Nearly a half-century of data is a commanding sample, encompassing
all possible market conditions ranging from raging secular bulls in
stock markets to a full-on once-in-a-century stock panic. If
American gold-futures speculators’ fervent belief that Fed-rate-hike
cycles slaughter zero-yielding gold is correct, it would absolutely
show up historically in such a massive data set. But
gold actually thrives in rate-hike cycles!
Since the Fed’s current 12th one of modern times likely isn’t
finished yet, let’s start with the previous 11 between early 1971
and late 2015. On average during the exact spans of all of them,
gold rallied 26.9% higher! Those are serious gains during
events supposed to slay gold investment demand on widening yield
differentials. Provocatively gold’s Fed-rate-hike-cycle performance
trounces that of the stock markets.
I
did a similar
study in late 2015 looking at the flagship S&P 500’s performance
during these same Fed-rate-hike cycles. This leading stock index
saw average gains of just 2.8% during their exact spans. That is
nearly an order of magnitude smaller than gold’s 26.9%! While the
idea that gold vastly outperforms the stock markets during
Fed-rate-hike cycles seems obnoxiously heretical today, it is
absolutely true historically.
Gold’s average gains across all modern Fed-rate-hike cycles come
from rallying big in 6 while slumping modestly in the remaining 5.
In the majority where gold rallied, it averaged huge gains of
61.0% over their exact spans! And in the other 5 where gold
fell, its average losses were asymmetrically small at just 13.9%.
It turns out there are two key characteristics of Fed-rate-hike
cycles that govern whether gold wins or loses.
The
first is obvious, how gold is priced when the Fed births a
new rate-hike cycle. If this metal is already trading at high
levels relative to preceding years, it tends to slump as the Fed
tightens. Fed rate hikes aren’t bullish for gold late in a major
bull. By that time the great majority of willing investors have
already bought, and sentiment is too greedy to be sustainable.
Fed-rate-hike cycles won’t trump gold’s bull-bear ones.
The
second is how fast the Fed actually hikes rates. The more
gradual the rate hikes, the more bullish it is for gold. This makes
sense given the extreme anxiety gold-futures speculators have over
higher rates. The faster the Fed hikes, the more psychological
pressure to capitulate on gold due to the perception a higher yield
differential makes this metal less attractive. This is still less
important than gold’s cycle entry price.
Without exception, gold rallied in every modern rate-hike cycle
shown in these charts if it entered them at low price levels.
But if gold was already high after years of rallying when the Fed
started hiking rates again, this metal fell. Again gold’s own
bull-bear cycles overrule any Fed-rate-hike cycle influence. As in
all markets, gold’s relative buying price is the dominant driver by
far of its ultimate investment returns.
But
the pace of hiking is an important secondary determinant of gold’s
rate-hike-cycle fortunes. During those 6 of 11 cycles where this
metal soared 61.0% higher on average, the hiking pace was gradual.
It averaged just 35 basis points per hike and 24bp per month. In
contrast in the other 5 cycles where gold fell 13.9%, the FOMC’s
average hiking pace was radically steeper at 110bp per hike and
141bp per month!
By
these standards, gold’s performance in the Fed’s newest 12th
rate-hike cycle since 1971 ought to be incredibly bullish. Just
before the Fed started hiking again in December 2015 after nearly a
decade of no hikes dominated by the ZIRP era, gold slumped to a
brutal 6.1-year secular low. That’s about as low as gold’s
ever been relative to recent history entering a Fed-rate-hike cycle,
leaving huge room for big buying.
And
as of mid-March, the FOMC has hiked three times for 75 basis points
total over 15 months. That is the most-gradual Fed-rate-hike cycle
ever witnessed by far, averaging just 25bp per hike and a
mere 5bp per month! There’s never been an FOMC more timid in hiking
rates than Janet Yellen’s, she has always been an uber-dove. Thus
despite two rate hikes in 3 months now, today’s cycle will remain
the most-gradual ever.
So
gold is really set up to soar dramatically during this rate-hike
cycle’s span! That’s already happened despite all the irrational
selling by the gold-futures speculators leading into each of the
Fed’s latest rate hikes. As of the very mid-March rate-hike day,
gold had powered 15.1% higher since the day before the
initial rate hike in mid-December 2015. That’s despite
incredibly-euphoric stock markets weighing on gold sentiment.
With
gold enjoying perfectly-bullish conditions both entering and within
this 12th modern Fed-rate-hike cycle, its ultimate gains should
easily exceed that +61.0% winning average. And that’s darned
exciting for smart contrarian investors. A garden-variety 61.0%
gain from gold’s close the day before that first rate hike a couple
Decembers ago yields a conservative gold rate-hike-cycle upside
target way up at $1709!
That’s another 36.5% higher from this week’s levels, implying
massive additional gains by the time the Fed’s rate hikes run their
course. It just blows my mind that sophisticated gold-futures
speculators can’t take a few hours to understand how gold has really
performed historically during rate-hike cycles. With the extreme
levels of leverage they run, you’d think they’d do some serious due
diligence to understand odds.
While gathering and crunching all this data since 1971 certainly
isn’t trivial, why not simply look to the last Fed-rate-hike cycle
for some guidance? Between June 2004 to June 2006, the FOMC hiked
the FFR at every meeting for 17 consecutive hikes. These
totaled 425 basis points, more than quintupling the federal-funds
rate to 5.25%. If higher rates and yield differentials slay gold,
it should’ve plummeted at 5%+.
Yet
during that exact span, gold actually surged 49.6% higher!
There is literally zero chance Yellen’s hyper-easy FOMC will hike
rates 17 times, or get anywhere close to 5%. Yellen constantly
rationalizes why she and her henchmen believe the new normal
federal-funds rate won’t be higher than 3%. Given this Fed’s
history of over-promising and
under-delivering
on rate hikes, I’d be surprised to see them get over 2%.
If
gold could power 49.6% higher over two years in the mid-2000s in
such an extreme rate-hike cycle compared to today’s, similar gains
should be easy this time around. That would push gold up to $1588,
again far higher than today’s levels. It’s sad most investors and
speculators today don’t have a clue how bullish Fed-rate-hike cycles
are for gold, as they’ve been deluded by the “zero-yielding gold”
propaganda.
Gold
has always yielding nothing, and thus never been a yield play.
Gold serves an entirely different purpose than bonds in investors’
portfolios. They don’t directly compete as the gold-yield fallacy
implies, but complement each other. Gold is a unique asset that
tends to move counter to stock markets, making it the ultimate
portfolio diversifier. It is a hedge against stock-market weakness,
essential portfolio insurance.
Stock-market fortunes,
not prevailing interest rates, are the biggest driver of gold
investment demand. In euphoric stock markets like today’s late in
major bulls, investors feel no need to prudently diversify their
portfolios with gold. They foolishly assume stocks will keep rising
indefinitely, so they way over-allocate to lofty, overvalued
stocks. But when stock bulls inevitably yield to
subsequent bears,
the tables quickly turn.
Gold
investment demand soars for portfolio-diversification purposes,
driving gold sharply higher. That’s exactly what happened in late
2015 and early 2016 soon after the Fed’s initial rate hike of this
12th cycle. The stock markets sold off hard in a significant
correction, rekindling gold demand. The resulting
heavy gold
investment buying catapulted this metal into its first new bull
market since 2011, which continues today.
While recent months’ extraordinary Trumphoria stock-market surge in
the wake of the election masked it, Fed rate hikes are very
bearish for overvalued stock markets. When the Fed artificially
suppresses rates as it did to the ultimate extreme in that 7-year
ZIRP era before its initial December-2015 hike, stocks are bid up to
otherwise-unsustainable valuations. Their low dividend yields
aren’t competing with normal bond yields.
But
once the Fed hikes and starts normalizing rates, the rising bond
yields suck capital back out of the lofty stock markets. Bonds held
to maturity are far-less risky than highly-volatile stocks, and
unlike gold the dividend-paying stocks dominating the major indexes
are indeed yield plays. Gold thrives in Fed-rate-hike cycles
because they are so damaging to stock markets, which
rekindles gold investment demand.
Another major underpinning of gold-futures speculators’ erroneous
belief that rate hikes are bad for gold is the idea they are bullish
for the US dollar. But history doesn’t bear that out either.
Entering that last Fed-rate-hike cycle in the mid-2000s, the US
Dollar Index was already very low relative to recent years. Yet it
still actually
lost 3.8% while the FOMC hiked its FFR target 17 times in a row
from 1.0% to 5.25%!
The
gold-futures speculators are dead wrong, gold thrives in
Fed-rate-hike cycles! Thus every time they irrationally panic and
emotionally dump gold futures leading into a likely Fed rate hike,
treat it like a gift. Those are great opportunities to aggressively
buy the resulting bargains in both gold and the stocks of its
miners. That proved true again in early March, as the entire gold
sector soared right after the Fed hiked!
With
a newly-confirmed Fed-rate-hike cycle now well underway, investors
can ride gold higher with this metal itself or shares in the
flagship GLD SPDR Gold Shares gold ETF. But the greatest gains by
far will be won in the stocks of the gold miners with
superior
fundamentals. Their profits and thus stock prices
really leverage
gold’s upside, so a carefully-handpicked portfolio of elite miners
will far outperform gold.
At Zeal we’ve
literally spent tens of thousands of hours researching
individual gold stocks and markets, so we can better decide what to
trade and when. As of the end of Q4, this has resulted in 906 stock
trades recommended in real-time to our newsletter subscribers since
2001. Fighting the crowd to buy low and sell high is very
profitable, as all these trades averaged stellar annualized realized
gains of +22.0%!
The key to this
success is staying informed and being contrarian, meaning
buying low when others are scared. So we aggressively added new
trades in early March before the Fed’s latest hike. An easy way to
keep abreast is through our acclaimed
weekly and
monthly
newsletters. They draw on our vast experience, knowledge, wisdom,
and ongoing research to explain what’s going on in the markets, why,
and how to trade them with specific stocks. For only $10 per issue,
you can learn to think, trade, and thrive like a contrarian.
Subscribe today,
and get deployed in great gold stocks before they surge far higher!
The
bottom line is history proves gold thrives in Fed-rate-hike cycles.
Rising rates are very damaging to stocks and bonds, leading to
surging gold investment demand for prudent portfolio
diversification. The lower gold’s price levels entering
Fed-rate-hike cycles, and the more gradual their hiking pace, the
better gold performs. That makes gold’s prospects in today’s newest
Fed-rate-hike cycle exceptionally bullish.
Gold
not only languished at deep secular lows when the Fed started hiking
a couple Decembers ago, but this rate-hike cycle’s pace is the
slowest ever by far. And the hyper-dovish Yellen FOMC is still
falling all over itself to convince markets this relaxed pace will
continue to dawdle. Thus gold is perfectly set up to enjoy a
massive Fed-rate-hike cycle rally well exceeding the already-big
historical winning averages. |