Gold continued to shine brightly in August, recording its fourth all-time high this year — $2,529/oz. This latest record was fueled by a spike in risk-asset volatility at the start of the month, declining real rates, and a softer US dollar (USD) following dovish Federal Reserve (Fed) commentary and the increased consensus expectation for 100 basis points (bps) of rate cuts by year end.1
While the spot price retreated off its most recent record high to end August, the yellow metal still registered a +2.33% gain for the month. This is gold’s seventh consecutive month of gains, and it now has a year-to-date return of 21.56% — outperforming stocks and bonds in 2024.2
On top of already robust central bank demand, investors contributed to gold’s upward momentum. Gold ETFs had inflows of more than $1.5 billion in August.3 This surge in investment demand can be attributed to the macro factors discussed above and investors seeking to “get ahead of the Fed.” Gold’s historical negative correlation to real rates has produced an average 1.6% monthly return when real rates fell during a month in which the Fed lowered its fed funds rate.4
Looking ahead, accelerated investment demand from conducive macro tailwinds such as lower real rates, weakness in the USD, and persistent geopolitical tensions — including the US election — may keep gold shining brightly into 2025.
Flows: Global gold ETF holdings increased by .5% in August, an estimated 12 metric tons(t). This was the third consecutive positive month of inflows since May 2023 and the highest cumulative 3-month average since Aprill 2022. Net speculative positioning in COMEX gold futures increased to 200,291 contracts in August, the highest rolling 6-month average since May 2020 and the largest position since March 2020. The sustained extension of long contracts highlights that money managers remain bullish on gold.5
Factors: Gold’s technical forecast remains bullish until we see a lower low; it’s currently positioned to the upside, trading well above its 50-day, 100-day, and 200-day simple moving averages. A 14-day RSI of 56.6 indicates that gold’s price still has room to increase before reaching overbought levels.6
Fundamentals: The latest data signals underlying strength in the economy and less urgency for large and rapid rate cuts. As a result, expectations for a 50 bps rate cut in September have declined over the past two sessions, with market-implied odds falling to 30%. Increased probability of the negative real rate relationship with gold depends on gold markets getting support from weaker economic and inflation reports.7