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Wells Fargo Strategist Throws Shade on Gold While Bitcoin Outshines All

Last Updated March 4, 2021 2:34 PM
Gerelyn Terzo
Last Updated March 4, 2021 2:34 PM

By CCN.com: Wells Fargo’s name is synonymous with gold.  Henry Wells and William Fargo launched the bank in the Wild West during the California Gold Rush, supporting both the investment in and delivery of the precious metal via its famous stagecoach. The U.S. has come a long way since the stagecoach, and bitcoin is now encroaching on gold’s store-of-value territory. Shockingly, Wells Fargo Head of Real Asset Strategy John LaForge no longer believes the precious metal is the one to own, telling Kitco :

“Stocks, in the last few weeks have hit, and you see the days when stocks really get hit, and what does gold do? Gold is up $3, it’s up $5, it’s up $7. I think where we are in this gold super cycle, this long cycle with commodity prices, is we’re kind of in the dull period.”

LaForge didn’t jump on the cryptocurrency high-speed bullet train. In fact, he suggested if anything, the bitcoin is too nascent of an asset class to cause any disruption to gold’s multi-trillion dollar market. But he didn’t have to validate crypto; the returns speak for themselves. While gold is struggling to deliver paltry single-digit returns, bitcoin investors are having the time of their lives as the biggest cryptocurrency reaches for the moon.

bitcoin price chart
The bitcoin price reached a new 2019 high on May 27. | Source: CoinMarketCap

What Safe Haven?

Gold is designed to be a safe haven from the volatile stock market, especially during times of heightened uncertainty in the economy. The precious metal’s uncorrelated nature to other asset classes is what makes it so special. Now that it has essentially lost its shine during a time when investors need a flight to quality more than ever, bitcoin is increasingly looking like the only asset class that’s packing a punch in 2019.

LaForge points investors to currencies instead of gold except he chooses the wrong one, suggesting the U.S. dollar instead of a cryptocurrency such as bitcoin and saying:

“If you want to get defensive, you’re almost better off in other defensive assets too, so the dollar versus say, gold, if you see volatility. Gold’s just not acting that well, frankly.”

‘No Interest Left in Gold’ While Bitcoin Demand Keeps Rising

June gold futures are currently hovering at $1,277. Perhaps the most telling sign that gold has lost its luster is that demand for the commodity is waning. Wells Fargo’s Lafarge has a $1,300 price target on the precious metal but don’t get your hopes up:

“There’s just no interest left in [gold].”

Meanwhile, over in crypto land, Fundstrat Co-Founder Thomas Lee tweeted today:

“The resilience of bitcoin in the face of heightening tensions shows that bitcoin/crypto is one of the few places to find alpha.”

It’s probably just a matter of time before the Wells Fargo strategist sees the light, too.