Is Gold Becoming Another Regular Old Commodity?

by Cullen Roche, Pragmatic Capitalism

One of my more controversial views in finance is that gold will one day be viewed as a mere commodity and not a form of money. Ā  My reasoning for this view is simple ā€“ I think the era of money as a physical item is long behind us and that the future of money rests with electronic forms of money that serve primarily as a record of account and medium of exchange. Ā That means the need for physical gold as a form of money will likely cease to exist or at least be reduced substantially in the future.

As for gold at present, well, my views are simple:

  • Gold is definitely a form of money because it is viewed by many as a medium of exchange.
  • Gold is not a very good form of money because it is not a widely accepted medium of exchange.
  • Gold is primarily a commodity, but the idea of gold as ā€œmoneyā€ still remains.
  • The price of gold has what I refer to as a ā€œfaith putā€ embedded in it because it is often hoarded as a form of money.

But an interesting thing has happened to gold in the last 30 months. Ā It has started to act a lot like a regular old commodity. Ā In fact, its ā€œfaith putā€ seems to have been removed to some degree. Ā If we look at the CRB Index and the price of gold thereā€™s actually been a rather high correlation:

gold_CRB

 

It all makes me wonder if gold isnā€™t starting to be viewed for what it is ā€“ a mere commodity? Ā Of course, I am biased and in the minority of people who hold this view (central banks and governments donā€™t even agree with me!), but I do wonder if this is the beginning of a secular trend or merely a case of me cherry picking some recent action?

 

Copyright Ā© Pragmatic Capitalism

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