Is Gold Overpriced?

The extraordinary ascent of gold prices in recent years has attracted more economically sophisticated analysts to gold than have studied it for quite a while. Gold, the stuff of legend and myth, evokes more emotion than any other commodity, but it isn’t exempt from rational economic analysis. Earlier this year, Claude B. Erb and Campbell R. Harvey completed a thorough, critical review of the various propositions that have been put forth to justify investing in gold.1 This paper was ably summarized by Michael Edesess in a previous Advisor Perspectivesarticle.

Another paper, by George Patterson and Lingjie Ma, which appeared a few months earlier, addressed some of the same propositions but has received less attention. Besides building an econometric model of gold prices, Patterson and Ma were also attempting, very practically, to answer the question, “Is gold overpriced?”2 The two pairs of authors were unaware at the time that they were setting off down the same road. They reached largely similar conclusions, even though Patterson and Ma applied a seldom-used analytical method to get at the answer to their question, and Erb and Harvey were not trying to answer that specific question.

Patterson, without Ma, presented a summary of their work recently to a gathering in Boston. Both Patterson and Ma work in quantitative investments at BMO Global Asset Management, and Patterson holds a doctorate in physics, as well as the CFA and CFP® charters.

Patterson explained that the motivation for the paper arose directly from their professional work. Their employer, Bank of Montréal, often flies them to Toronto, where they repeatedly saw how Canadians were caught up in the recent commodities boom culturally as well as economically. Even as the U.S. was suffering economically, Canada seemed to Patterson and Ma to be filled with “gold bugs.” Half of the Toronto stock (TSX) index, Patterson pointed out, is in energy and metals, and the metals allocation includes many gold mining companies, which helps to explain the Canadian cultural attention to gold.

Patterson and Ma were perplexed at hearing analysts talk of gold moving to $3,000 or $5,000 a troy ounce. When gold hit $1,900 an ounce in September 2011, Patterson told Ma that he wanted to short it. Ma replied that they should first build an analytical model, and so the paper was born. Patterson said that when Ma summarized their research in China, the Chinese audience loved it, but the Canadians hated even the premise that there could be any decline in the price of gold.


1. Claude B. Erb and Campbell R. Harvey, “The Golden Dilemma,” Financial Analysts Journal, Vol. 69, No. 4, July/August 2013, pp. 10-42.

2. Lingjie Ma and George Patterson, “Is Gold Overpriced?” Journal of Investing, Vol. 22, No. 1, Spring 2013, pp. 113-127.