iShares Gold Trust (IAU) — returned nearly 49% over trailing twelve months, outpacing virtually every traditional asset class.
Gold ETF holds no futures, leverage, or options; returns depend solely on the spot price of gold bullion.
Gold allocations of 5% to 10% are standard for genuine diversification; expect zero yield and 28% maximum tax rate on gains.
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Gold crossed a threshold last year that most investors had not penciled into their models: IAU returned nearly 49% over the trailing twelve months, outpacing virtually every traditional asset class. That run forces a real question: not just about whether to own gold, but about what role it actually plays once you do.
iShares Gold Trust (NYSE:IAU) is a physically backed gold ETF managed by BlackRock. Each share represents fractional ownership of physical gold bullion held in vaults. The fund holds no futures, uses no leverage, and collects no options premiums. Its entire return comes from one source: the spot price of gold.
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The fund was launched in January 2005 and has grown to roughly $83.8 billion in net assets. Its annual expense ratio is 0.25%, lower than the SPDR Gold Shares ETF’s 0.40%, making it the preferred vehicle for cost-conscious long-term holders. There is no dividend; the dividend yield is 0%. Investors own gold, and gold pays nothing.
The portfolio role IAU fills is specific: a non-correlated store of value that tends to hold or appreciate when equities, credit, and fiat currencies come under stress. Investors use it as a hedge against inflation, currency debasement, and systemic financial risk, not as a return engine in the conventional sense.
The case for holding IAU is tied directly to the macro backdrop. The Consumer Price Index reached 327.5 in February 2026, sitting at the 90th percentile of its historical distribution, and core PCE has risen steadily from 125.5 in April 2025 to 128.4 by January 2026. Persistent inflation is exactly the environment where gold has historically earned its keep.
Equity volatility has also returned. The VIX recently spiked to almost 31, well into high-fear territory, and reached an extreme panic reading of over 52 in April 2025. During those spikes, gold’s non-correlation to equities is precisely what makes it useful. IAU’s 7% gain in the week ending April 2, 2026 reflects that dynamic playing out in real time.
