Taper Tantrum Takes a Bite Out of Gold

This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

By Paul Wong, CFA, Market Strategist, Sprott

Gold bullion[1] is down 8.66% YTD through February 28, 2020, but is up 9.36% YOY. Gold mining equities[3] have fallen 16.78% YTD but have increased 11.37% YOY. Silver[2] and platinum[19] are the precious metals standouts for the recent period, up 1.01% and 11.28% YTD, and 60.02% and 37.71% YOY, respectively. This compares to 1.72% YTD and 31.29% YOY returns for the S&P 500 TR Index.[6]

Month of February 2021

Indicator

2/28/2021

1/31/2021

Change

Mo % Chg

YTD % Chg

Analysis

Gold Bullion[1]

$1,734.04

$1,847.65

($113.61)

(6.15)%

(8.66)%

The worst month since 2016 as real rates rise

Silver Bullion[2]

$26.67

$26.99

($0.32)

(1.18)%

1.01%

Silver continuing to hold firm

Gold Senior Equities (SOLGMCFT Index)[3]

113.05

128.61

(15.56)

(12.10)%

(16.78)%

Gold equities back to summer breakout

Gold Equities (GDX)[4]

$31.13

$34.51

($3.38)

(9.79)%

(13.58)%

(Same as above)

DXY US Dollar Index[5]

90.88

90.58

0.30

0.33%

1.05%

Still near the lows

S&P 500 Index[6]

3,811.15

3,714.24

96.90

2.61%

1.47%

Back to 50 daily moving average

U.S. Treasury Index

$2,488.92

$2,534.92

($46.00)

(1.81)%

(2.75)%

Bond source of risk and volatility

U.S. Treasury 10 YR Yield

1.40%

1.07%

0.34

31.85%

53.84%

Sharp sell-off, touching 1.60%

U.S. Treasury 10 YR Real Yield

(0.75)%

(1.04)%

0.29

28.11%

31.68%

Back up driven by nominal yields

Silver ETFs (Total Known Holdings ETSITOTL Index Bloomberg)

964.38

939.62

24.76

2.64%

8.65%

Silver maintaining accumulation

Gold ETFs (Total Known Holdings ETFGTOTL Index Bloomberg)

104.18

106.85

(2.67)

(2.50)%

(2.41)%

Four outflow months in a roll

Gold Blues as Silver Woos

February was a tough month for gold, which marked its worst monthly performance since November 2016. Spot gold fell $114/oz, or 6.15%, to close the month at $1,734/oz. Half of this decline came in the two final days of February, as bond selling spiked into near panic mode and triggered a multi-asset sell-off into month-end. Figure 1 shows how gold has been inversely correlated to bond yields.

February's pullback occurred on the back of various developments. Rising energy prices and the markets’ view on U.S. government spending bolstered the reflation trade with a rally in broader equity markets. The U.S. dollar strengthened as markets priced in a swift economic recovery and as U.S. Treasury yields advanced to the highest level in a year, with the 30-year bond rising above 2% and the rapid move in the 10-year to over 1.5%, which we will discuss in more detail. Meanwhile, gold ETFs saw holdings decline towards the end of February. Silver prices held up much better as markets sought out physical ownership and recognized silver’s undervalued economic merits. Gold stocks were drawn down in a volatile fashion with the gold price move. Precious metal equities followed physical metals’ performance, with silver related stocks outperforming gold stocks.