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Correlation Deep Dive

Gold vs Brent Oil: Correlation Analysis

Pearson correlation of daily returns for Gold (Spot) and Brent Crude Oil. Rolling windows, yearly breakdown, regression beta, and divergence analysis. Data window spans to (1,264 aligned observations).

30-Day
+0.083
Essentially uncorrelated
90-Day
-0.035
Essentially uncorrelated
1-Year
-0.029
Essentially uncorrelated
5-Year
+0.116
Essentially uncorrelated

What the Number Means

With a correlation of -0.03, Gold (Spot) and Brent Crude Oil are essentially uncorrelated at daily frequency. Either the relationship operates at a different time horizon or the shared driver has been dominated by idiosyncratic noise during the observation window.

Recent vs Long-Run Behavior

Last 90 Days
-0.035
5-Year Baseline
+0.116

The historical positive relationship between Gold (Spot) and Brent Crude Oil has inverted. Recent 90-day correlation is -0.03 versus a long-run reading of 0.12. This kind of decoupling tends to mark regime transitions. Often one asset is responding to a newly dominant driver while the other is anchored to the old narrative.

Statistical Details (1-Year Window)

Pearson Correlation (r)-0.029
R-Squared (r²)0.001
Beta (Gold (Spot) vs Brent Crude Oil)-0.017
Daily Volatility σ(Gold (Spot))1.69%
Daily Volatility σ(Brent Crude Oil)2.89%
Observations252

Correlation measures directional co-movement; R² quantifies the fraction of variance explained by the linear relationship. Beta is the slope coefficient from regressing Gold (Spot) returns on Brent Crude Oil returns. A beta above 1 means the first asset amplifies moves of the second.

Year-by-Year Correlation

YearCorrelationStrengthObservations
2026-0.034Essentially uncorrelated91
2025+0.092Essentially uncorrelated252
2024+0.186Essentially uncorrelated252
2023+0.025Essentially uncorrelated250
2022+0.382Weak positive251
2021+0.057Essentially uncorrelated168

Year-by-year correlation reveals how the relationship has held up across different macro regimes. Sharp year-over-year swings in correlation often mark the transition between stress and calm periods.

Rolling 90-Day Extremes

Most Correlated Period
+0.561
ending 2022-07-13
Most Decoupled Period
-0.169
ending 2023-06-16

Extremes in rolling 90-day correlation often coincide with regime changes, forced deleveraging, or the arrival of a dominant new macro theme that overwhelms normal relationships.

Methodology

Correlations are computed on daily log-adjacent returns for Gold (Spot) and Brent Crude Oil, aligned on shared trading dates. We use the Pearson product-moment coefficient, which measures the linear relationship between two return series.

Windows are the most recent N observations for 30D, 90D, and 1Y (252 trading days); the 5Y figure uses all aligned data up to 1,260 observations. Beta is the OLS slope from regressing the first series on the second. Data updates daily with a 24-hour revalidation cadence.

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Get daily macro analysis on shifting correlations, regime transitions, and cross-asset signals.

Correlation is not causation and backward-looking statistics can fail when regimes shift. Positions sized on historical correlation assumptions should be stress-tested against scenarios where the relationship breaks. For informational purposes only.