Rising agri-commodity and energy prices, along with continued expansionary policies in the West, are likely to keep gold prices up.
The gold's performance, when compared to other precious and industrial metals, shows that silver has clearly been the leader in the pack, turning in a price return of about 570 per cent from 2001 to 2010, followed by copper at 434 per cent.
Gold's gain, on the other hand has been 419 per cent. This may be supportive of the view that gold, not being a real store of value in an industrial sense, may not be the best high-beta commodity play.
Gold's widely claimed status of being a safe haven, especially in tough economic environments, becomes more pronounced when its returns in the two recessions is considered.
During the dotcom bubble burst (March-November 2001) and the subprime/housing crisis (December 2007-June 2009), gold delivered the highest, and positive, returns, while most other metals generated negative returns.
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