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Gold in a Modern Multi-Asset Portfolio: Construction, Sizing and Risk

Flashy Academy·

Gold's role in a modern portfolio is more nuanced than the safe-haven narrative suggests. Here is how institutional portfolio managers actually think about sizing, correlation, and rebalancing a gold allocation.

The conventional wisdom about gold in a portfolio — buy it as insurance against catastrophe, hold 5-10%, and do not worry too much about the rest — is technically correct but strategically thin. Institutional portfolio managers who have thought carefully about gold allocations approach the question with considerably more rigour, and that rigour produces meaningfully different conclusions about sizing, timing, and rebalancing. ## The correlation case for gold Gold's primary value in a multi-asset portfolio is its correlation profile. Over long periods, gold has demonstrated low to negative correlation with equities and a strong inverse relationship with real interest rates (nominal rates minus inflation expectations). These properties mean that gold tends to appreciate precisely when equity portfolios are under the most stress — during inflationary shocks, currency crises, and periods of elevated geopolitical risk. But correlation is not constant. In acute market crises — the March 2020 COVID shock is the most recent example — gold can temporarily become correlated with risk assets as investors liquidate everything to meet margin calls. This transient correlation spike is well documented and should be modelled in any serious stress-testing framework. The lesson is not that gold fails as a hedge, but that its hedging properties operate over months and years, not days. The empirical work on gold's portfolio properties is extensive. Research by the World Gold Council and by academic economists including Campbell Harvey has consistently shown that a portfolio with 5-10% gold allocation exhibits lower drawdowns and better risk-adjusted returns over long periods than an equivalent portfolio without gold, particularly in environments of elevated inflation or currency instability. ## Sizing the allocation How much gold is appropriate? The academic optimisation frameworks typically suggest somewhere between 4% and 12% depending on assumptions about expected returns, volatility, and correlation. Most institutional portfolios with a genuine gold allocation sit in the 3-8% range. The more useful framing is to size the allocation based on what it is meant to achieve. If the objective is inflation hedging, the sizing should be driven by the inflation sensitivity of the rest of the portfolio — specifically the real rate duration of the fixed income holdings. If the objective is currency diversification, it should be proportional to the portfolio's USD concentration. If it is tail-risk insurance, the sizing is a function of the premium the investor is willing to pay for optionality that may never be exercised. These are not mutually exclusive objectives, but they produce different sizing conclusions. An investor primarily concerned with tail risk may conclude that 3-4% is sufficient. An investor with a large allocation to long-duration nominal bonds who is genuinely concerned about inflation may need 8-10% to meaningfully hedge that exposure. ## Rebalancing discipline Gold is a mean-reverting asset over long periods, which means that a disciplined rebalancing programme extracts a meaningful return premium compared to buy-and-hold. When gold rallies sharply — as it did in 2020 and again in 2023-24 — the rebalancing discipline requires selling gold and buying the underperforming asset. This is psychologically difficult and operationally straightforward. The investors who execute it consistently demonstrate the best long-term outcomes. The practical mechanics of rebalancing a gold allocation depend on the vehicle. Rebalancing a gold ETF allocation is as simple as any other equity rebalancing. Rebalancing a physical gold allocation involves transaction costs, bid-offer spread, and potentially vault logistics. These frictions argue for wider rebalancing bands for physical allocations than for ETF allocations. ## Product selection and total cost of ownership The choice of gold investment vehicle — ETF, futures, OTC forwards, physical — affects the economics of holding a gold allocation in ways that are not always transparent in product marketing. Physically-backed gold ETFs typically charge 15-40 basis points per year in management fees. COMEX futures require rolling, which creates a cost or benefit depending on the shape of the gold futures curve (gold is typically in slight backwardation or modest contango). OTC forwards can be structured to avoid ongoing fees but require ISDA documentation and credit exposure. Physical gold has custody and insurance costs that vary significantly with the custodian and jurisdiction. For a long-term strategic allocation, the cumulative effect of these cost differences is material. A 20 basis point per year difference in total cost of ownership compounds to a significant drag over a 10-year holding period. Portfolio managers who understand these mechanics make better product selection decisions and can explain those decisions credibly to investment committees and clients. Flashy Academy's Gold 101 track builds exactly this foundation.