The Fed won't be able to get inflation under control, gold price is going much higher – Wilshire Phoenix

Investors are once again turning to gold, pushing prices back above $1,800 an ounce, and one firm expects gold prices to continue to move higher as it is unlikely the Federal Reserve will be able to get the inflation under control anytime soon.

In a recent interview with Kitco News, Wade Guenther, managing partner at Wilshire Phoenix, which launched the Wilshire wShares Enhanced Gold Trust (NYSE Arca: WGLD) earlier this year, said that it's not surprising that gold has been lackluster through most of the summer as bond yields have been rising.

The yield on 10-year notes is holding near its highest level in three months. At the same time, Guenther noted that the yield on 10-year notes has roughly doubled from last year.

Gold has also struggled to attract safe-haven demand as equity markets continue to move from record highs to record highs, Guenther added.

However, Guenther also said that rising inflation and the growing threat of stagflation are forcing many investors to reevaluate their need for inflation and safe-haven hedge. For the past five months, the U.S. Consumer Price Index has been above 5%.

"If you had asked me last year, the gold price was, I would be if inflation was at 5%, I'd have said that we would be at record highs, we'd be back at 2000 again," said Guenther.

However, instead of supporting gold prices, the inflation pressures have driven expectations for the Federal Reserve to tighten its monetary policy. Economists are expecting the Federal Reserve to reduce its monthly bond purchases before the end of the year. At the same time, markets are pricing in a rate hike as early as June of 2022.

"It feels like people still have faith in the Fed and I just, but I just, I don't see the Fed getting in front of the inflation curve," said Guenther.

Guenther added that the current inflation environment is different from the last few years because it isn't being driven by consumer demand. Prices are going higher because of major supply-chain issues around the world. Some economists expect that the global supply bottleneck could take years to fix.

"There is nothing the Federal Reserve can do to fix the supply chain," he said. "The Fed's tools just don't work on because the inflation is on the long side of the track. This is not inflation driven by consumer demand."

Not only is the Federal Reserve unable to fix the global supply chain, but Guenther also noted that monetary policy could only be tightened so much. Growing government debt has limited how high interest rates can go, he said.

With gold prices back over $1,800 an ounce, Guenther said that he expects that it is only a matter of time before the market sees new bullish momentum.

Guenther added that the firm's adaptive gold-backed exchange-traded fund still remains 100% invested in the gold market as volatility has been relatively low.

 

By Neils Christensen

For Kitco News

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