Why Precious Metals ETFs are Really Surging (and It’s Not The Fed) | ETF Trends

Many commentators at some of the more popular web portals and news agencies have suggested that the surprise “non-taper” by the Fed is causing gold to surge.

Granted, money poured into precious metals as soon as Wall Street got wind of the Fed’s choice; that is, they’re still going to buy $85 billion in bonds every month to depress longer-term interest rates. Yet the fact remains, the correlation between gold and ultra-accommodating monetary policy has been exceptionally weak for quite some time.

By way of review, the Fed doubled its bond buying experiment last September. Theoretically, record levels of electronic money printing should have devalued the dollar and pushed currency proxies like gold through the proverbial roof. However, SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), iShares Gold (IAU), ETFs Gold Trust (SGOL) and the spot price of the yellow metal hardly skyrocketed over the last 12 months.

As I suggested in my August piece, precious metals have been tied more to the fortunes or, misfortunes, of key emerging markets. When you focus on the direction of several benchmark ETFs, you see a strong positive correlation between iShares Gold (IAU) and iShares Emerging Markets (EEM), particularly in 2013. It is worth noting that both IAU and EEM bounced off respective June lows at nearly the same moment in time. It’s also worth noting, in fact, that there has been an unusually strong correlation for roughly 2 years.

It follows that one reason for gold’s “comeback” is the increasing interest in emerging markets over the last three months. Over the last 30 days, money flowing back into emerging market ETFs has given funds like EEM the upper hand in relative strength.