Duke University
Gold Market Foundations
Duke University

Gold Market Foundations

Campbell R. Harvey

Instructor: Campbell R. Harvey

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Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
Intermediate level

Recommended experience

4 hours to complete
Flexible schedule
Learn at your own pace
Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
Intermediate level

Recommended experience

4 hours to complete
Flexible schedule
Learn at your own pace

What you'll learn

  • Explore major drivers of gold's rise: financialization, de-dollarization, central bank buying, regulatory shifts, and the dollar's reserve role.

  • Explain the performance of gold as a safe-haven asset (gold’s returns during equity drawdowns and inflation surges, as well as non-financial crises).

  • Utilize a framework to evaluate the future price path of gold (weighing gold’s diversification potential vs. its high relative valuation).

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Recently updated!

October 2025

Assessments

4 assignments

Taught in English

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There are 4 modules in this course

This module explains why gold has sustained value over centuries by grounding its appeal in physical and institutional properties—durability, scarcity, fungibility, and the absence of single-authority control. We introduce the “golden constant” and evaluate gold’s performance as an inflation hedge, separating its long-term, purchasing-power stability from its short-term volatility. We then analyze gold’s role in diversified portfolios by examining its volatility and its (time-varying) correlations with equities and bonds, drawing out implications for portfolio risk. Finally, we assess the recent drivers of price increases and, using the golden-constant lens, construct plausible future price scenarios.

What's included

5 videos2 readings1 assignment

This module explains how gold’s price is shaped by supply rigidity (slow, capital-intensive mine responses) and sector-specific demand across jewelry, technology, and investment. It then examines how financialization—via exchange-traded funds and gold-backed stablecoins—has broadened access and intensified demand, weighing the trade-offs between physical holdings and ETF exposure (liquidity, fees, tracking error, and custody risk). Using the “golden constant” framework alongside new empirical evidence, we assess how ETF adoption has influenced real gold prices. We analyze how the “weaponization” of the U.S. dollar and sanctions regimes spur some countries to reduce dollar dependence and de-dollarize, redirecting portfolio demand toward gold. Finally, we evaluate central-bank accumulation—especially by China and Russia—its implications for global reserves, and what this means for future demand and price dynamics.

What's included

6 videos1 assignment

This module examines how the U.S. dollar’s reserve-currency status channels global demand into dollar assets while creating the Triffin dilemma. It then analyzes how bilateral central-bank swap lines, sanctions risk, and deliberate de-dollarization efforts are reshaping reserve strategies and lifting official-sector demand for gold. We review Basel III’s High-Quality Liquid Asset (HQLA) framework—eligibility tests, haircuts, and liquidity horizons—and evaluate the case for classifying gold as Tier 1 HQLA alongside top-quality sovereigns. Finally, we assess the demand and price impact if such a designation were adopted, including likely balance-sheet reallocation by banks and central banks and plausible price paths for gold under alternative adoption scenarios.

What's included

3 videos1 assignment

This module examines how the U.S. dollar’s reserve-currency status channels global demand into dollar assets while creating the Triffin dilemma. It then analyzes how bilateral central-bank swap lines, sanctions risk, and deliberate de-dollarization efforts are reshaping reserve strategies and lifting official-sector demand for gold. We review Basel III’s High-Quality Liquid Asset (HQLA) framework - eligibility tests, haircuts, and liquidity horizons - and evaluate the case for classifying gold as Tier 1 HQLA alongside top-quality sovereigns. Finally, we assess the demand and price impact if such a designation were adopted, including likely balance-sheet reallocation by banks and central banks and plausible price paths for gold under alternative adoption scenarios.

What's included

5 videos1 reading1 assignment

Instructor

Campbell R. Harvey
Duke University
5 Courses77,616 learners

Offered by

Duke University

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