Gold is back in favour among investors concerned by the volatility of currency and equity markets, the sustained weakness of the dollar and fears that inflation is again on the march.
The restoration of gold in these troubled times as a safe haven asset is captured in the latest data from the World Gold Council (WGC), which shows total identifiable demand reaching a record, in dollar terms, US$20.7billion in the third quarter this year, up 30 per cent on the same quarter last year.
But it was investment demand that hit the headlines, with identifiable investment demand during the third quarter of this year nearly double that of a year earlier in tonnage terms and 115 per cent in dollar terms.
Driving that demand, said the WGC in its Third Quarter 2007 report published this month, was a record inflow into Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) and similar products.
Added backing to gold's strong performance came this month from the Precious Metals Equity Index, which is run by funds monitor Morningstar.
It showed the index was on a three-month return, as of November 16, of 22.5 per cent. That made it the top-ranked fund index maintained by Morningstar, ranking ahead of both emerging markets equity funds (on a 17.4 per cent three-month return), and Asia-Pacific ex-Japan (15 per cent).