Informed i’s Weekly Business Insights
Extractive summaries and key takeaways from the articles carefully curated from TOP TEN BUSINESS MAGAZINES to promote informed business decision-making | Since 2017 | Week 432, covering December 19-25, 2025 | Archive

Why gold went through the roof this year—and why its price may have been raised permanently
By Jim Edwards | Fortune | December 24, 2025
3 key takeaways from the article
- The S&P 500 closed up 0.46% yesterday to hit a new record of 6,909.79. The index is now up 17.48% for the year. It’s likely that investors will mark this in their spreadsheets as a very good year. Unless, of course, they have a friend who bought gold at the beginning of 2025 which price is up an astonishing 71% year to date, and is currently hovering around $4,514 per troy ounce.
- There’s a hackneyed narrative explaining why gold went up: We had a volatile year with President Trump’s tariffs disrupting global trade; Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine; concern about a bubble in AI-related tech stocks; Bitcoin went nowhere this year (it’s down 7%); inflation is trending up; and gold is the safe-haven investment for nervous investors who want a hedge against pretty much all of that. A more plausible explanation is that the introduction in 2004 of gold exchange-traded funds—which make buying gold as easy as buying stocks—has permanently pushed up the price of gold. The more recent introduction of tokenized gold stablecoins—crypto tokens backed by gold reserves and thus pegged to the price of gold, which can be “staked” or locked up as investments in other risk assets like bonds—is likely to push the price up further.
- But don’t get too excited. Gold isn’t actually a great hedge against inflation over the long run as indicated by Comex report.
(Copyrighte lies with the publisher)
Topics: Gold Prices, Safe Investment
Extractive Summary of the Article | Read | Listen
The S&P 500 closed up 0.46% yesterday to hit a new record of 6,909.79. The index is now up 17.48% for the year. With only the quiet Christmas week left before the end of 2025, it’s likely that investors will mark this down in their spreadsheets as a very good year. Unless, of course, they have a friend who bought gold at the beginning of 2025.
The price of gold is up an astonishing 71% year to date, and is currently hovering around $4,514 per troy ounce. That friend is now laughing at you, foolish stock investor, for wasting your money on trivialities like the Magnificent Seven.
There’s a hackneyed narrative explaining why gold went up: We had a volatile year with President Trump’s tariffs disrupting global trade; Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine; concern about a bubble in AI-related tech stocks; Bitcoin went nowhere this year (it’s down 7%); inflation is trending up; and gold is the safe-haven investment for nervous investors who want a hedge against pretty much all of that.
In fact, that is only partially true, according to newish research from Claude Erb and Campbell Harvey of the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University. The reality, they say, is that the introduction in 2004 of gold exchange-traded funds—which make buying gold as easy as buying stocks—has permanently pushed up the price of gold.
The more recent introduction of tokenized gold stablecoins—crypto tokens backed by gold reserves and thus pegged to the price of gold, which can be “staked” or locked up as investments in other risk assets like bonds—is likely to push the price up further, they say.
But don’t get too excited. Gold isn’t actually a great hedge against inflation over the long run, Erb and Harvey argue. The price of gold has high volatility, whereas inflation is a low-volatility phenomenon. Gold investors can spend years losing money if they are trying to beat inflation: And then there’s the performance of gold generally, in nominal dollars, versus stocks.
According to Comex continuous contract for gold versus the S&P 500 index over the past 20 years, the winner ain’t gold:
So has gold peaked? No one knows, obviously. But it is interesting that investment banks like Société Générale, Morgan Stanley, and Mitsui have all expanded their precious metal trading teams this year, while other banks are exploring getting back into the “vault” business of storing gold reserves, the Financial Times reports.

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