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Economic and Market Commentary

After the Gold Rush: The Strategic Role of Commodities in Portfolios

Investors have poured into gold – but they may also see compelling benefits from a broad-based commodity allocation.
After the Gold Rush: The Strategic Role of Commodities in Portfolios
After the Gold Rush: The Strategic Role of Commodities in Portfolios
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  • Despite recent volatility, gold prices are still experiencing their strongest rally since the 1970s, supported by central bank purchases and investment flows.
  • Alongside gold, investors should also consider a broad commodities allocation, which offers the potential for compelling returns and portfolio diversification.
  • Commodities stand to benefit from long-term support by secular forces, including the artificial intelligence boom, green energy transition, and a shift in capital allocation behavior among commodity producers.

The dramatic rally that sent gold prices above $4,300/oz before giving back some gains has dominated headlines. We believe investors also should consider the secular forces behind many commodity markets, and the potential of broader commodities to offer attractive return potential and to help diversify portfolios.

Despite recent volatility in gold prices, the overall surge in value in the past year has surpassed even that of the S&P 500. Several factors are behind gold’s climb: 1) purchases by central banks, especially in emerging market countries, seeking to diversify reserves and protect against asset confiscation, 2) Federal Reserve rate cuts (both actual and anticipated), as lower rates reduce the opportunity cost for holding gold, and 3) inflows into both physical and financial gold products by high net worth individuals, global sovereign wealth funds, pension plans, and retail investors – all seeking to own real assets after the biggest global price shock in decades revealed the hidden inflation risk in many portfolios.

These factors have driven gold (and silver) to the highest nominal price levels in history, and for gold, to the highest real price in the past 45 years (see Figure 1).

Figure 1: Gold set a new inflation-adjusted peak in 2025

Source: Bloomberg and PIMCO as of 7 October 2025

Figure 2: Return and risk data since 2020 highlight appeal of broad commodities

Source: Bloomberg and PIMCO data from 31 Dec. 2019 through 30 Sept. 2025. Asset class proxy indices are as follows: commodities – Bloomberg Commodity Index Total Return; gold – Bloomberg Gold Total Return Index; global equities – MSCI World Index - Global Equities; S&P 500 (proxy for U.S. equities) excluding “Magnificent 7” tech firms; global fixed income – Bloomberg Global Aggregate Total Return Index; U.S. fixed income – Bloomberg US Agg Total Return Index. Inflation beta is defined as the sensitivity of an asset’s return to inflation surprises.

Figure 3: Return correlations across key asset classes since 2020 show diversification appeal of broad commodities

Source: Bloomberg and PIMCO data from 31 Dec. 2019 through 30 Sept. 2025. See Figure 2 for asset class proxies.

Macroeconomic and market developments across the global economy this decade have offered a real-world example of the textbook case for hedging inflation via both commodities and gold. Historically, adding commodities has tended to improve portfolio returns and lower overall portfolio volatility versus a traditional 60/40 portfolio of equities and fixed income (see Figure 4).

Figure 4: Commodities have helped boost portfolio returns while trimming volatility

Source: Bloomberg and PIMCO as of 30 September 2025. Calculations are based on a 10% addition of commodities sourced from bonds in a 60/40 portfolio (60% stocks proxied by S&P 500 Total Return Index and 40% bonds proxied by Bloomberg US Aggregate Total Return Index).

History has shown that inflation does not need to be rising or even particularly high to warrant owning liquid real assets, and that in periods when inflation is just above the central bank targets, real assets may demonstrate their benefits of not only reducing volatility but supporting returns. While we all know that past performance does not guarantee future results, we expect the secular forces of recent years to persist, underpinning commodity returns for years to come.

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