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Gold loses some luster after Trump鈥檚 decisive win

US President Donald Trump. Credit:

Donald Trump鈥檚 victory immediately buoyed markets from stocks to Bitcoin. Gold is going to take a lot longer to turn things around.

In the two days immediately following the Republican candidate鈥檚 win, the precious metal鈥檚 performance was the worst in at least 13 US presidential election windows, according to Deutsche Bank. Gold prices have dropped almost 7% since Election Day, even as several other asset classes enjoy a post-campaign boost.

鈥淲hen people get really interested in gold is when nothing else is working,鈥 said Rob Haworth, senior investment strategy director at US Bank. 鈥淓quities are working well; you鈥檙e even seeing solid returns for low-quality corporate credit. So you鈥檙e less likely to seek out alternative sources of portfolio growth.鈥

Gold鈥檚 slide is a marked turnaround for a commodity that had surged by more than 30% in the year leading up to the US vote, hitting record after record as geopolitical and economic risk drew investors in. Although longer-term uncertainty remains in place, with Trump known for his at-times wildcard positions, much of gold鈥檚 safe-haven appeal apparated after the most bullish scenario for gold 鈥 a contested election 鈥 failed to materialize.

A rallying dollar in the days since Trump鈥檚 re-election is also negative for bullion as it鈥檚 priced in the US currency. At the same time, the US economy appears to be in pretty good shape, with inflation easing and the Federal Reserve not in a rush to keep lowering interest rates.

With the rest of the US economy looking so strong right now, 鈥済old would be a contrarian call,鈥 said Matt Miskin, co-chief investment strategist at John Hancock Investment Management. 鈥淭he sentiment right now is there鈥檚 very little risk, whether it鈥檚 fundamentally, geopolitically. These types of environments, it鈥檚 not easy to go against momentum.鈥

Some investors may not personally agree with the President-elect鈥檚 platform, but just knowing what to expect during Trump 2.0 has helped remove some of the recent uncertainty that helped propel the precious metal to new highs. The confirmation of a Republican clean sweep also means there鈥檒l be more leeway to carry out the policies he telegraphed on the campaign trail. Trump鈥檚 agenda, ranging from tax cuts to financial deregulation to tariffs, has hedge funds piling into sectors that could benefit, including large-cap banks and domestic industrials.

鈥淲e just have more compelling places to put capital鈥 than gold, said Jay Hatfield, chief executive officer of Infrastructure Capital Advisors, citing opportunities in financials and other riskier assets. 鈥淲ho wants to miss the 10% rally in Goldman Sachs?鈥

Cryptocurrencies have also surged since Election Day amid expectations that Trump鈥檚 policies will boost digital assets. Total assets of iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF, BlackRock Inc.鈥檚 spot-Bitcoin ETF, surpassed $40 billion for the first time this past week. That surge coincided with a sharp outflow in SPDR Gold Shares, the world鈥檚 largest physically-backed gold ETF.

鈥淲ith a Trump win, one key implication is that we鈥檙e likely to see less regulation on cryptocurrencies. That should pull at least some capital away from gold; that pocket of demand that鈥檚 speculative may very well move to cryptos now,鈥 said Kristina Hooper, chief global market strategist for Invesco Advisers.

Still, gold may still have some room to run longer term. Trump鈥檚 hardline pledges on taxes and tariffs are likely to eventually result in higher deficits and inflation, which could trigger the return to buying gold as an inflationary hedge.

If a second Trump term disrupts global trade and geopolitics, it may also prompt central banks such as those in China and Russia to continue to buy gold to diversify away from the dollar-reserve system.

鈥淎 lot of reserve managers of 鈥榝riends鈥 and 鈥榥eutral-ish鈥 countries, they鈥檙e going to be a little bit more worried about a more erratic foreign policy and implications on the safety of their reserves,鈥 said Rajeev De Mello, global macro portfolio manager at Gama Asset Management SA.

The current selloff is 鈥渁 buy-the-dip story more than anything else,鈥 he added. 鈥淎fter the sharp decline since the US elections, gold has entered a more affordable range.鈥

(By Yvonne Yue Li and Sybilla Gross)

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