Investors have often used gold tactically in their portfolios, with an aim to help preserve wealth with a relatively liquid asset that can potentially help navigate risk during market corrections, geopolitical stress or persistent dollar weakness. But in addition to gold’s tactical benefits, its function as a core diversifying asset during a variety of business cycles may demonstrate that gold can potentially play a more long-term strategic role.
Gold has the potential to enhance portfolio construction strategies on several fronts — providing broad benefits that can potentially support strategic investment efforts across multiple business cycles. Primary potential benefits include:
Here we show how the key pillars and historical benefits of gold investing can provide potential support for these vital elements of investors’ portfolios.
Managing risks — both short term and unknown — is critical to optimizing portfolio performance. And gold’s historical benefits during a variety of market and business cycles can potentially provide a ballast for portfolios during good times and bad.
Gold has demonstrated a low and negative historical correlation to many financial indices over time, potentially helping to smooth out volatility and preserve wealth. For example, gold has shown a 0.01 and 0.09 monthly correlation to the S&P 500 Index and Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index, respectively, since the 1970s.1 This persistent and historically low correlation to many other financial assets is rooted in gold’s diverse sources of demand — both cyclical and countercyclical — which is illustrated during different phases of a full economic cycle.
Adding an allocation to gold may potentially provide diversification that can help mitigate portfolio drawdowns, increase portfolio efficiency through higher Sharpe Ratios and provide a potential store of value for investors over time.
With a reputation as a perceived safe-haven asset,2 gold’s performance has the potential to shine during extreme volatility and market turbulence, growing less correlated to traditional equities and providing a potential ballast for portfolios that can help limit drawdowns.
As 2020 transformed asset markets, investors were faced with constructing portfolios that can weather the low interest rate and risk landscape. Gold’s historic benefits may potentially provide advantages to the modern-day portfolio that can help investors navigate these evolving risks.
Based on gold’s low correlation to many traditional markets, gold has historically provided positive returns during extreme bouts of volatility and market turmoil — earning it a “perceived safe-haven”2 reputation with some investors.
Unlike several other asset classes typically used as portfolio diversifiers, gold has historically been an efficient source of portfolio diversification, with its low correlation historically growing stronger over time, while many real assets have moved in an opposite direction,3 more closely aligning with movements of traditional equities and bonds.
Gold may merit consideration in more than just down markets, with its benefits potentially providing investors longer-term and strategic opportunities in terms of capital appreciation. Gold’s diversification and historically uncorrelated returns can potentially help limit episodes of portfolio drawdown, and that can help optimize portfolios by limiting impairments to capital. But gold is not just for managing the downside and may provide the potential opportunity to help investors grow their capital during certain market cycles, with some growth potential of its own.
Gold has historically provided competitive long-term returns through a variety of business cycles — good and bad — adding longer-term diversification that can potentially help with optimizing portfolio returns.
Growing the value of portfolios and optimizing returns across business cycles is essential when constructing portfolios for the long run. Further, a low correlation between the asset classes in a portfolio can also potentially help lower portfolio volatility and therefore, all else being equal, increase diversification that can potentially improve Sharpe Ratios and enhance the overall risk-adjusted return of the portfolio over time.
As illustrated in our research article, Case For Constructing Portfolios with SPDR® Gold Shares (GLD®), we examined how including GLD in a hypothetical multi-asset portfolio – that also includes global stocks, various classes of fixed income, real estate, private equity, and commodities – may improve its risk-return characteristics. We found that holding between 2% and 10% of GLD between January 1, 2005 (GLD’s first year of operation) and the current period may have improved the hypothetical portfolio’s cumulative returns and Sharpe ratio and lowered its maximum drawdown, as compared to a portfolio without any gold-backed investments.
Figure 4: Illustrating the Potential Benefits of a Gold Allocation in a Portfolio – Defining the Hypothetical Portfolios
Asset Class Weightings for Hypothetical Blended Portfolios A, B, C and D
Asset Class | Weighting (%) | |||
Portfolio A | Portfolio B | Portfolio C | Portfolio D | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Equity | 43 | 42 | 40.5 | 38 |
Total Equity | 43 | 42 | 40.5 | 38 |
Government Bonds | 24 | 23 | 21.5 | 19 |
IG Credit | 15 | 15 | 15 | 15 |
Inflation-Linked Bonds | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 |
HY Bonds | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
EM Debt | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 |
Total Fixed Income | 45 | 44 | 42.5 | 40 |
Real Estate | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
Private Equity | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 |
Commodities | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 |
Gold | 0 | 2 | 5 | 10 |
Total Alternative | 12 | 14 | 17 | 22 |
Portfolio Total | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
Results | ||||
Annualized Returns (%) | 5.61 | 5.64 | 5.77 | 5.97 |
Annualized Standard Deviation | 10.61 | 10.46 | 10.35 | 10.23 |
Sharpe Ratio* | 0.39 | 0.40 | 0.41 | 0.44 |
Maximum Drawdown (%) | -35.25 | -34.20 | -33.07 | -31.16 |
Cumulative Return (%) | 185.94 | 187.63 | 194.35 | 205.56 |
*Assumes risk-free rate of Citigroup 3-month T-bills. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.
Source: State Street Global Advisors, as of March 31, 2024. Equity is represented by MSCI AC World Daily TR Index; Government Bonds is represented by Bloomberg Global Aggregate Government Bond Index TR; IG Credit is represented by Bloomberg Global Aggregate Corporation Bond TR Index; Inflation-Linked Bonds is represented by Bloomberg World Inflation Linked Bond TR Index, HY Bonds is represented by Bloomberg Global Corporate High Yield Bond TR Index; EM Debt is represented by Bloomberg Emerging Markets USD Aggregate Bond TR Index; Real Estate is represented by Global Property Research General TR Index, Private Equity is represented by LPX Composite Listed Private Equity TR Index; Commodities is represented by Bloomberg Commodity Index TR; Gold is represented by SPDR® Gold Shares (GLD®).
The asset allocation scenario is for hypothetical purposes only and is not intended to represent a specific asset allocation strategy or recommend a particular allocation. Each investor’s situation is unique and asset allocation decisions should be based on an investor’s risk tolerance, time horizon and financial situation. It is not possible to invest directly in an index. The impact of adding GLD to an investor’s portfolio will vary based upon an investor’s asset allocation decisions and market performance, among other things. Index returns are unmanaged and do not reflect the deduction of any fees or expenses. Index returns reflect all items of income, gain and loss and the reinvestment of dividends and other income. Returns do not represent those of a specific product but were achieved by mathematically combining the actual performance data of the constituents as listed in the table above. Performance of the hypothetical blended portfolio assumes no transaction and rebalancing costs, so actual results will differ. Performance of SPDR® Gold Trust (GLD®) reflects annual expense ratio of 0.40 percent. All data based on monthly measures of performance. Investment return and principal value will fluctuate, so you may have a gain or loss when shares are sold. Current performance may be higher or lower than that quoted. Visit ssga.com for most-recent month-end performance. Additional information regarding the Hypothetical Portfolio Methodology computation can be found in the Glossary.
To read the full report, you can access the case study here.
Fund Before Tax | As Of |
---|
Fund Before Tax | As Of |
---|
Based on gold’s historical diversification and positive risk-adjusted returns during market turbulence, it has a track record of potentially helping to temper short-term volatility and limit drawdowns.
But an allocation to gold may support preserving wealth on a longer-term basis too, with its historical positive longer-term risk-adjusted returns during a variety of business cycles helping investors weather unforeseen risks and capital impairments that can erode a portfolio’s value over time. See the above chart for gold’s longer-term performance and how it can potentially influence portfolio construction during a variety of business cycles over time.
Gold’s liquidity may help with wealth preservation, providing investors a relatively deep and liquid trading market that may be a key benefit of holding gold strategically. With a historical trading volume on par with major debt, currency, and equity markets, the estimated average daily turnover of gold is more than US $162 billion, which is equivalent to US $41 trillion a year.4
And even during turbulent markets, like those experienced during March 2020, gold market liquidity has stood the test of time, with gold trading volumes hitting US $237 billion in March during the initial COVID-19 lockdown,5 providing investors ready access to a liquid trading market — or access to cash — when many other assets were declining in value.
Longer term, gold can potentially provide a unique store of value for investors, helping to preserve purchasing power over time. Gold has kept up with rising prices by historically providing positive returns during periods of rising inflation, particularly during environments of extreme inflation.6
Additionally, gold has showcased its ability to hedge against currency debasement by historically maintaining a negative correlation to the US dollar.7 Taken together, gold’s ability to keep up with prices, in conjunction with currency depreciation, may potentially help investors maintain purchasing power and preserve value against inflationary pressures.
Investors may consider thinking about gold not just as a tactical asset to be used in times of crisis, but instead, as a long-term, strategic investment with unique and diverse potential benefits. Learn about the primary benefits gold may offer portfolios relative to other major asset classes, as well as its distinct contribution to portfolio strategy over the long run in Invest in Gold: A Portfolio Diversifier With Staying Power.