Precious Metals & Energy - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- Inflation is here and the conventional wisdom is that we should buy gold. Conventional should actually be underlined as gold’s history as an inflation hedge is anything but certain.

Gold has had spotty returns over the past few months despite creeping price pressures and fears that U.S. inflation in 2021 could be the worst in 35 years.

Those surprised or frustrated by this might benefit from studying the history of the precious metal’s returns over the past 40 years.

A Morningstar analysis of gold’s returns during some of the highest U.S. inflation periods since the 1980s shows a negative yield for long-only investors in the yellow metal.

Commodities other than gold - as well as REITS, or real estate investments trusts, and {ecl-1040||TIPS}}, or Treasury Inflation Protected Securities - actually performed better than gold, and more like an inflation hedge, during these periods.

Year-to-date, benchmark gold futures on New York’s Comex are down 1.4%. The spot price of gold, which reflects live trades in bullion, is almost 1% lower on the year.

In comparison to these, the Consumer Price Index, a globally accepted measure of inflation, expanded by an annual rate of 5% in May in the United States.

The Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index, a tamer measure of inflation used by the Federal Reserve, rose 3.6% in the year to April.

Until the Covid-19 outbreak and the chronic disruption of U.S. supply chains that followed, the Fed’s target of keeping annual inflation at or under 2% has barely been challenged over the past decade.

Now that it has, inflation is the one risk that’s on top of investors’ minds. But gold hasn’t delivered - to expectations at least.

“Gold is really not a perfect hedge” for inflation, Morningstar portfolio strategist Amy Arnott said in a CNBC post this week that analyzed the returns of various asset classes during periods of above-average inflation in the United States.

“There’s no guarantee if there’s a spike in inflation, gold will also generate above-average returns,” Arnott added.

Gold’s correlation to inflation has been relatively low - 0.16 - over the past half century, Arnott said. This metric shows how closely gold and inflation track together. A correlation of 0 means there’s no relationship, while a correlation of 1 means they move in unison.

Arnott’s study shows that long-only investors in gold lost 10% on average from 1980 to 1984, when the annual inflation rate was about 6.5%.

Similarly, gold yielded a negative 7.6% return from 1988 to 1991, a period when inflation was about 4.6%.