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“I putt like I did when I was a kid. When you’re a kid, you’re not scared of anything.” – Arnold Palmer
Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.
It’s a quiet morning in the markets so far as US equity futures are flat to modestly lower while US treasuries are modestly higher as they’ve steadily risen since the Fed cut rates last week. The only economic report remaining on the calendar this morning is New Home Sales, but weekly mortgage applications were released earlier today, and while overall applications were up 11% for the week, nearly all of it was related to refinancing activity which was up 20% compared to a gain of just 1% for purchase applications.
While 10-year yields seemingly rising every day since the Fed cut rates last week, gold is on pace for its sixth straight day of gains and its fifth straight record closing high. Gold surged earlier in the year before trading in a sideways range from April through July. Still, as summer wound down and the current easing cycle became more of a certainty, investors have been piling into the world’s oldest inflation hedge.
Looking at gold from a longer-term perspective, all-time highs in the price of gold have been relatively rare. Since 1976, it has closed at a record high on just 2% of all trading days, and they were generally concentrated into three periods. The first was in the late 1970s to early 1980. Then gold went another quarter century with no record highs. It wasn’t until the financial crisis and the Fed instituted its zero-interest rate policy that gold broke out above its 1980 peak, and those new highs continued until late 2011. During Covid, gold briefly hit another all-time high but traded in a sideways range again through the end of 2023. This year, though, the pace of new highs has been coming in heavy with 36 – or about an average of once a week. Put another way, with 36 new closing highs this year, 14% of all the record closing highs in the price of gold have occurred this year.
Of the 36 record closing highs in the price of gold this year, six have occurred this September (through 9/24), and that has helped to move September into second place for the month with the largest number of new closing all-time highs. That’s nearly the opposite of the S&P 500 where September has been the month with the fewest record closing highs. The only month with more is August, but with just four trading days left this month, August’s lead is safe for this year.