Last week, I had posted on how the euphoric gold hype was really just a proxy for a weak dollar investment and there are more highly correlated and efficient means to exploit currency changes than buying an anachronistic, useless metal. Additionally, there’s talk of a dollar crisis and what it portends for commodity prices. When the pitches on TV for selling gold for cash are running around the clock like they are now, doesn’t it make you wonder whether we’ve reached bubble territory? Sounds similar to home flipping frenzy and the internet bubble news cycle to me. Often times, by the time main street is talking about a hot trend, the smart money is already on the way out and newcomers are left holding the bag when the bubble bursts. Regardless, a visual always helps. As such, I thought it would be instructive to demonstrate what the correlation is between gold and the US dollar index, how strong the correlation is, and when it breaks down. Since it’s easier to visualize a positive correlation above the line, I actually used the inverse dollar basket ETF. How does correlation work? In short, the correlation coefficient runs from -1 to 1 with -1 being a perfect inverse and 1 being a perfect correlation. For instance, the returns of the S&P500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average are pretty highly correlated, so the correlation coefficient is very close to 1. Generally, when one index is up, so is the other – as well as the magnitude. When one is down, so is the other. There was a slight divergence during the Financial meltdown in March due to the higher proportion of Financials in the S&P compared to Industrials in the DJIA, but for the most part, you can count on a pretty strong correlation outside of crises. Conversely, you can expect that any of the inverse ETFs will have very close to a -1 correlation with the index they track. When something has virtually no correlation, like say, stock market returns on days that it rains, the correlation is close to zero. Opinions vary, but statisticians generally consider something at .6 or higher to be pretty highly correlated. .8 is very strong. between .4 and .6 is mildly correlated and anything between -.3 to .3 is usually considered not well correlated at all. My rain/return example is probably somewhere between -0.1 to 0.1 (especially since it would depend on where you are when it’s raining! – no logical correlation). What is the Correlation between Gold and the US Dollar? Well, normally, there’s a pretty good negative correlation. As the dollar weakens, the price of gold increases, since gold is denominated in US Dollars but widely used in global markets and by central banks of foreign countries. There’s a long history surrounding gold as a currency throughout civilization and without boring you with the details, due to its relative rarity and historical significance, it has never quite lost it’s luster as a proxy for value even though it has very little practical utility from an industrial or economic standpoint. Gold is where people turn to when they think there’s a possibility of complete disaster – i.e. if paper currency went out the window due to untold disaster, the thinking is that gold would still be a tradable currency. If hyperinflation were to kick in, rather than burning dollar bills in your furnace for warmth, you could buy firewood with gold (this has actually happened throughout history). There are other tales of people trucking a wheelbarrow full of paper currency to the store to buy a loaf of bread during periods of hyperinflation. As far-fetched as this scenario sounds for society today in America, people still cling to the notion of the end of days (of

Continued here:
The Gold-Dollar Correlation Explained and Why it Broke Down
