CMIGS Are Gold and Silver Sending a Warning About Inflation Instead of War?
Posted: Wed May 27, 2026 7:07 pm
Are Gold and Silver Sending a Warning About Inflation Instead of War? Gold is supposed to hedge against inflation, stock market volatility, and global conflict. You may have been told this by a friend, a family mentor, or an older investment publication. But, like many things, the truth is messier than any single heuristic or adage can convey. There is truth to holding gold as an investment hedge. It is a permanent, physical asset with a stellar long-term track record. However, a newly confirmed Federal Reserve chair, constant updates on the war in Iran, an executive branch seeking further rate cuts, and an ongoing battle with inflation have created a macroeconomic environment that is new to everyone. But here is what we do know. First, a Brief History Lesson Gold is not a perfect inflation hedge, and we don’t think it should be marketed that way. According to Amy Arnott, portfolio strategist at Morningstar, “there’s no guarantee if there’s a spike in inflation, gold will also generate above-average returns.” Her analysis of historical data found that gold investors lost 10% on average from 1980 to 1984, when the annual inflation rate was about 6.5%. From 1988 to 1991, when inflation averaged 4.6%, gold returned negative 7.6%. Gold’s correlation to inflation over the past half-century has been relatively low at just 0.16, meaning the two don’t move in tandem nearly as often as investors assume. The exception was the 1970s, when gold returned 35% annually during an inflationary period averaging 8.8%. But that environment, driven by an oil embargo and supply shocks, looked a lot like what we’re seeing now, which is part of why the current moment is worth paying attention to. Oil and Supply Shocks: The First Domino Market updates often move faster than the news can keep up with, which is why understanding the sequence matters more than following headlines. Crude above $100 a barrel means trucking costs go up, manufacturing inputs get more expensive, and consumer prices follow, pushing inflation expectations higher and giving the Federal Reserve fewer reasons to cut rates, which makes holding a non-yielding asset like gold more expensive relative to bonds and cash. That cycle can restart with every new development in the Strait of Hormuz. The war didn’t break gold’s safe-haven case. It routed the damage through energy and inflation first, which changed what investors were reacting to. Inflation Fears and Monetary Policy Expectations Gold has shown a counterintuitive relationship with inflation. It’s not as directly correlated to raw inflation numbers as it is to how the Federal Reserve responds to them. When inflation is rising, and the Fed is expected to remain patient, gold tends to benefit because real yields remain low and there’s no penalty for holding an asset that pays nothing. But when inflation pushes the Fed toward holding or hiking rates, gold can get caught in the crossfire rather than acting as a hedge. Kevin Warsh, confirmed as the 17th Federal Reserve chair on May 13, inherits an institution dealing with five straight years of elevated inflation, which has spiked again due to the war in Iran. He has signaled a hawkish disposition toward fighting it, which means the same inflation data that might otherwise push gold higher could keep working against it as long as rate cuts stay off the table. Jim Iuorio, CEO of JI Financial Strategies, laid out the distinction in CME Group’s historical analysis of gold across economic cycles: “gold seems to benefit from inflation but less so if the expectations are for the Fed to act decisively against it. Simply put, gold likes inflation but doesn’t like the higher rates or the strengthening U.S. dollar that the Fed may engineer to combat it.” Metals vs. Headlines: A Shift in Market Priorities Saxo Bank analysts, as reported by TheStreet, warn that gold and silver are being pulled simultaneously by safe-haven demand, dollar strength, and Iran war developments, which means the metals are responding to several competing signals at once rather than any single narrative. Iain Barnes, CIO at Netwealth, told CNBC that “financial, rather than fundamental investors are the marginal buyers of gold and we see them reducing risk across the board,” which means gold can move with equity markets during broad risk-off episodes rather than against them. Long-Term Perspective: Metals as Inflation Indicators and Protection Reuters reported that traders have largely priced out U.S. rate cuts this year, with markets now pricing a 31% chance of a hike by March 2027. In six of the last eight recessions, gold outperformed the S&P 500 by 37% on average, according to CME Group’s historical data, because recessions tend to trigger rate cuts and liquidity injection, which is the environment gold actually benefits from. The structural drivers behind precious metals ownership remain intact. Central bank diversification is still happening, sovereign debt is still rising, and supply-driven inflation is something the Fed can only partially address. The path to higher prices runs through a Fed pivot, a resolution in Iran, or both, and a long-term position in gold and silver is built to absorb the volatility that comes before either of those happens. Stay up to date with daily spot prices at CMI Gold & Silver.The post Are Gold and Silver Sending a Warning About Inflation Instead of War? first appeared on CMI Gold & Silver.
Source: https://cmi-gold-silver.com/are-gold-an ... ad-of-war/
Source: https://cmi-gold-silver.com/are-gold-an ... ad-of-war/