Gold ETFs see steep inflows as investors look to hedge

By Ryan Vlastelica / January 24, 2018 / www.marketwatch.com / Article Link

The largest exchange-traded fund to track gold has seen heavy adoption thus far in 2018, with massive inflows amid a rally in the precious metal's price, as well as interest from investors looking to hedge their portfolios.

The SPDR Gold Shares GLD, +0.08% fund has had inflows of $873.6 million over the past week, according to FactSet data. That's the fourth-highest inflows of any U.S. listed ETF over the period, behind a trio of broad-based equity funds that includes the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust SPY, +1.16% , the largest ETF on the market, and which sees heavy volatility in its flows.

Don't miss: Here's what it was like to buy the first ETF ever on Day 1

The week's flows for the gold fund account for nearly half the $1.99 billion that has flowed into the fund over the past 12 months. The recent activity in the fund has taken its assets to about $36.3 billion, their highest level since November 2016.

A rival fund, the iShares Gold Trust IAU, +0.23% , has had inflows of $180.6 million over the past week, and $2.2 billion over the past year.

Gold prices GCZ8, -1.04% have been on a tear lately, having gained 5.7% over the past month and recently hitting their highest level since September. Over 2017, the gold ETF rose 12.8%, its best year since 2010.

While some of this rise has been credited to a decline in the U.S. dollar - which is down 11% against its major rivals over the past 12 months - the adoption has also come as U.S. stock indexes have been hitting repeated records at a time when concerns over valuation are growing. Bond yields are also expected to rise for several years - which would mean bond prices fall, as the two move inversely to each other. In other words, investors may be using gold as a hedge or diversification tool at a time when other asset classes may return less than they have been in the past, or when the returns could be negative.

See also: Stocks look pricey, bonds look pricey. Is it time for investors to consider cash?

Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research, on Wednesday wrote that "it is time to consider what assets to add to a portfolio as a hedge." He considered five scenarios that he said could hurt equity markets over the next term: a trade war, an unexpected military conflict, a pullback in the stock market, an inflation scare and a "generic economic shock," possibly related to commodity prices.

For four of these scenarios, Colas recommended gold as a hedge (for the fifth, a pullback in stocks, he simply recommended waiting out the volatility). In reference to the inflation-scare scenario, he wrote that "we're already seeing a piece of the trade go on," referring to the inflows into the gold ETFs.

Recent News

Mixed outlook for gold as it remains range bound for past three months

June 30, 2025 / www.canadianminingreport.com

Gold stocks down on flat metal price

June 30, 2025 / www.canadianminingreport.com

Gold stocks down on metal decline

June 23, 2025 / www.canadianminingreport.com

Huge quantifiable rise in geopolitical, economic and trade risks

June 23, 2025 / www.canadianminingreport.com

Platinum clearly ahead of palladium for first time in seven years

June 16, 2025 / www.canadianminingreport.com
See all >
Share to Youtube Share to Facebook Facebook Share to Linkedin Share to Twitter Twitter Share to Tiktok