Gold's INVERSE correlation with interest rates (Gibson's paradox)

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swissaustrian

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This is a bit of a theoretical issue but it's useful for gold investors. Ultimately this thread is about the inverse correlation between gold prices and real (inflation-adjusted) interest rates.

This discovery derives from the so called "Gibson's paradox"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson's_paradox

The key here is that this happened under the gold standard, i.e. with a fixed gold price.


The scientific text that showed how free floating gold prices (i.e. under a fiat money regime) are inversely correlated was written by none other than the one and only Larry Summers
(former Treasury secretary under Clinton: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Summers ) together with Robert Barsky. It's posted on GATA's website:
http://www.gata.org/files/gibson.pdf

The rule states that for every percentage point the real interest rate is below 2%, gold returns 8% year-on-year times that multiple. (example see below)

Hinde Capital has recently picked this research up and shown that gold is currently undervalued given the negative real interest environment that we're in:

http://www.hindecapital.com/blog/gold-poised-for-upside-breakout-of-current-range/
 
More on Gibson's Paradox:




 
...guys YOU are the gold mine!!!

I mean, this is something I grasp intuitively (ie, if I don't see any return on my money, when I store it in the bank, which in turn, makes shitload of money, using it as a reserve & lending it out - why should I be so kind to them, and supply them with that free ride fuel - instead of stuffing my mattress with something, that WILL yield something to me), but having it laid out like that, and having numbers crunched empirically... Priceless!
 

 
Another recent article on the issue with two great charts:

http://www.zealllc.com/2012/realgold11.htm
 
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