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Typically, gold (risk-off) rallies in distress while copper (risk-on) signals a strong economy. Recently, both have rallied simultaneously, confounding traditional models. This counterintuitive correlation suggests new market dynamics are at play, breaking down historical risk relationships.
The unusual tandem rise of gold (a safe haven) and tech stocks (risk-on) is explained by Vanguard's Joe Davis as the market pricing in two divergent possibilities: a pessimistic, deficit-driven slump and an optimistic, AI-fueled boom, dismissing a moderate middle ground.
Gold's price is rising alongside risk assets and falling during stress events, a reversal of its historical role. This behavior mirrors speculative assets like Bitcoin, suggesting its recent rally is driven by momentum and bandwagon effects, not a fundamental flight from fiat currency debasement.
Counterintuitively, gold prices have fallen despite escalating geopolitical conflict. This is not due to a change in its safe-haven status, but because of forced selling pressure from a deleveraging event in equity markets. This has created a temporary, stronger correlation between gold and risk assets.
The unusual concurrent rally in stocks (a risk-on asset) and gold (a risk-off asset) reflects a divided market sentiment. Investors are optimistic about corporate growth, driven by AI (buying stocks), while simultaneously fearful of government policies and fiat currency debasement (buying gold).
After initially selling off with other assets due to broad de-risking for liquidity, gold is beginning to reassert its safe-haven status. It has started rallying even as equities fall, suggesting the initial wave of forced selling has subsided, allowing its traditional negative correlation with risk assets to return.
The Grasberg mine disruption provides a fundamental catalyst for higher copper prices. This is amplified by a macro environment where investors are rotating into real assets like copper due to inflation risks and economic uncertainty, creating a potent combination for a price surge.
A wide range of historically reliable leading indicators—including copper prices, non-traded commodities, Korean equities, and small-cap stocks—are all simultaneously pointing towards a strengthening global cyclical outlook. This alignment across different assets and regions provides a more substantive and reliable signal than any single indicator could.
In an environment of supply chain shortages, investors should favor commodities essential for economic activity over monetary proxies like gold. Copper is critical for building data centers and its value is driven by real demand and scarcity, unlike gold's more abstract story.
For 50 years, commodity prices moved together, driven by synchronized global demand. J.P. Morgan identifies a breakdown of this trend since 2024, dubbing it the 'crocodile cycle,' where supply-side factors cause metals to outperform while energy underperforms, creating a widening gap like a crocodile's mouth.
Historically, the dollar and gold move inversely. When both assets rally together, it's a rare and powerful signal of deep-seated stress in the global financial system. This indicates a flight to safety in both the world's primary reserve currency and its ultimate hard asset.