Gold’s ‘Semi-Rational’ Run Gives Wall Street Vertigo

Wall Street has finally capitulated to gold’s record-breaking run.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon’s reluctant endorsement was the inflection point. “This is one of the few times in my life it’s semi-rational to have some in your portfolio,” said Dimon, adding that he was not a buyer, because “it costs 4% to own it,” referring what he could have earned in money markets instead.

Gold’s relentless rise this year has caught a lot of professionals off guard. According to the latest Bank of America Merrill Lynch money manager survey, a whopping 39% have no holdings, thereby missing out on the bull market.

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It’s difficult for fund managers to justify a sizable allocation in their portfolios. The precious metal doesn’t generate any income or have a clear measure of fair value. Its all-in cost of production is around $1,500 per ounce, according to Alpine Macro, a research outlet. This benchmark gives us little guidance, however, as to why the precious metal should be trading at $4,200, or even by some estimates hitting $5,000 next year.

But with gold prices showing no slowdown and the so-called “debasement trade” — a bet that central banks will keep interest rates low and major currencies will lose their value — being the talk of the town, money managers have no choice but to adapt to the new normal. Wall Street’s commodities analysts, for one, have been racing to upgrade their forecasts as the metal hit new highs.

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Bank of America Merrill Lynch now sees gold reach $5,000 by next year. The rationale is brutally simple — investment demand. If investors increase their purchases by only 14%, gold will hit this price.