Byron Wien: Gold Price Will Hit Record This Year

The Wall Street sage issues a prediction for the metal among his 10 expected ‘surprises’ for 2022.

The year-ahead prognostications of longtime financial pundit Byron Wien are always an event. His latest list of 10 forecasts, for 2022, is topped by a bullish outlook for gold—coming amid a flat stock market.

To Wien, now the vice chairman at investment house Blackstone, lagging gold is poised to gain 20% in price this year, hitting a new record. The metal, which had a nice run-up at the pandemic’s start, reached a peak of $2,070 per ounce in August 2020, then began falling, to $1,804 as of Monday’s closing. A 20% increase would elevate the price to $2,165.

Although gold has shown brief upward spurts since its summer 2020 apex, it has lagged behind Bitcoin, which has shot up more than four-fold over the same period. Analysts continue to argue whether bullion, a historical refuge in shaky times, or the hot new cryptocurrency will prevail in the long run as the refuge asset of choice.

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Wien, however, is convinced that gold will have an edge over crypto as inflation continues to bedevil the nation and its economy. Inflation this year will be a still-uncomfortable 4.5%, Wien stated, another of his 2022 divinations. 

“Despite strong growth in the US, investors seek the perceived safety and inflation hedge of gold amidst rising prices and volatility,” he foresees. “Gold reclaims its title as a haven for newly minted billionaires, even as cryptocurrencies continue to gain market share.”

Wien’s predictions, which the Wall Street celebrity calls the “10 surprises” he expects in the future, are always read eagerly in the financial community. He started issuing them in 1986, when he was chief US investment strategist at Morgan Stanley. Since 2018, he has published his 10 auguries with the help of Joe Zidle, chief investment strategist for Blackstone’s private wealth operation. 

By Wien’s definition, his surprises are events that the average investor thinks have just a one in three chance of occurring, while the Wall Street savant believes they actually possess better than 50% odds of happening.

Aside from his thoughts on gold, his most striking conjecture this year concerns a flat stock market. “The combination of strong earnings clashes with rising interest rates” and results in the S&P 500 “making no progress in 2022,” Wien wrote. Plus, he went on, a market correction will take place but fall short of the 20% slide that signals a bear market.

Among his other 2022 calls are that the benchmark 10-year Treasury will reach 2.75% (now it is at 1.63%), oil will rise to more than $100 per barrel (now $76), and the world returns to an almost pre-pandemic status despite the ongoing presence of the coronavirus.

Wien’s January 2021 exercise in prophecy had several good calls, including ongoing economic growth and a strengthening dollar. But there were duds, such as his expectation for better US-China relations, a Justice Department cessation of actions against Facebook and Google-parent Alphabet, and the stock market rally becoming broader.

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UK State Pension Struggling to Manage Inflation

The government’s decision to not increase pension payments in step with inflation in 2022 has angered many.

Ros Altmann, the former UK minister of state for pensions, told the Daily Mail on Saturday that new government policies regarding pension payments could cost lives. “We’re not just talking about being a bit strapped for cash, we’re talking about health deterioration or death,” she said.

In 2010, a coalition UK parliament introduced a policy called “triple lock,” which promises to increase pension payments proportionately so they catch up with inflation. It’s called the triple lock because it’s meant to increase each year in line with whichever is highest: inflation, as measured by the UK Consumer Prices Index (CPI); the average wage index; or 2.5%. In 2019, the Conservative Party promised to keep triple lock in place in its election manifesto.

However, for fiscal year 2022-23, the UK government will be breaking its promise. While November numbers showed UK inflation to be 5.1%, pension payments will only increase by 3.1% starting in April. Work and Pensions Secretary Thérèse Coffey said this year’s inflation numbers have been “skewed and distorted” by the pandemic.

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Nevertheless, energy prices are soaring. Gas is up 28% in the UK when compared with last year, and electricity is up 18.8%. Without an increase in their pension payouts, Baroness Altmann worries that elderly individuals may resort to turning off their heat this winter. Before the pandemic, approximately 1 million pensioners in the UK were already in a state of fuel poverty, she said.

In addition to this, the UK government has also been mulling the idea of increasing the pension age to 68 from 66 years old. Taken together, Altmann said these changes have left many pensioners feeling concerned.

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