Re: when will oil and gold decouple?
In a fundamental way, this chart (reproduced again below) says that gold and oil have never actually been coupled in the first place. The strong correlation in dollar prices, especially over the longer term, is more an artifact of variation (mostly shrinkage) in a common unit used to express the prices of both.
But that doesn't mean there are no real displacements in oil prices relative to gold. Even in gold terms, the price of oil has covered about a 3:1 range during the time frame that chart covers. Most investors would consider that pretty significant! That range only become insignificant when compared to the territory covered in nominal USD prices ... more like 30:1.
If you step back and look at the overall pattern, there does seem to be a long cycle running through it. Relatively high oil prices from about 1973 to about 1985, followed by relatively low oil prices 1986 to 1999, then back up again. Again, since we are looking at prices in gold terms, we can't dismiss these variations as dollar phenomena. Some thing real is going here, either with real supply and demand issues for gold, oil, or both. Some of the features we can associate with real economic events, such as the spike in 1990 associated with the Gulf War and the spike in 2005 associate with Katrina. There is also the inverted spike in early 1980 due to the manic blowoff in gold.
Originally posted by jk
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But that doesn't mean there are no real displacements in oil prices relative to gold. Even in gold terms, the price of oil has covered about a 3:1 range during the time frame that chart covers. Most investors would consider that pretty significant! That range only become insignificant when compared to the territory covered in nominal USD prices ... more like 30:1.
If you step back and look at the overall pattern, there does seem to be a long cycle running through it. Relatively high oil prices from about 1973 to about 1985, followed by relatively low oil prices 1986 to 1999, then back up again. Again, since we are looking at prices in gold terms, we can't dismiss these variations as dollar phenomena. Some thing real is going here, either with real supply and demand issues for gold, oil, or both. Some of the features we can associate with real economic events, such as the spike in 1990 associated with the Gulf War and the spike in 2005 associate with Katrina. There is also the inverted spike in early 1980 due to the manic blowoff in gold.
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