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Gold hit a new record high-and that’s an indicator of fear lurking within the stock market, Deutsche Bank says

Gold hit a new record high-and that’s an indicator of fear lurking within the stock market, Deutsche Bank says

The Comex gold futures contract hit $3,757.60 per ounce; the S&P 500 closed up 0.49% on Friday, hitting a new all-time high at 6,664.36. S&P futures are down 0.22% this morning, premarket.
Investors are both bullish on equities as well as being afraid that there are major downside risks, Deutsche’s Henry Allen says.
“Whilst gold prices have many drivers, one is the perception that it operates as a haven that investors buy in times of fear. After all, it doesn’t pay a dividend or a coupon, and over the very long term, it’s struggled to compete with other asset returns. This September, gold prices exceeded their previous inflation-adjusted peak from January 1980. That was a time when the US was heading into recession, driven by a huge monetary tightening by the Fed under Paul Volcker, aiming to get inflation down. So historically, high gold prices haven’t exactly been associated with rampant optimism,” Allen told clients in a note this morning.
So what are investors afraid of?
“U.S. inflation is priced to linger above target in the next few years, which is far from ‘perfect,’” Allen wrote. “That links up with lingering tariff fears, with reviews still due into sectors like pharmaceuticals and semiconductors. Prediction markets think a US government shutdown at the end of the month is increasingly likely. And markets are clearly worried about the payrolls slowdown too, hence rapid rate cuts are priced in. So the reality is there are lots of downside risks priced in, offering plenty of scope for events to resolve on the upside from a market perspective.”
JPMorgan’s Fabio Bassi and his team are also long on gold, according to a note seen by Fortune.
There is also a lot of chat about AI stocks being in a bubble, akin to the 1999-2000 dot-com boom. Prior to that bubble burtsing, the price of gold sank because investors were, notoriously, over-optimistic about tech stocks.
“A key difference with that period is gold prices were then around multi-decade lows in real terms. That would be more consistent with an environment of high exuberance, where people want to own assets with stronger returns, rather than gold which doesn’t pay a dividend,” Allen said.
Here’s a snapshot of the markets globally this morning: