• Gold's Wild Week: Why Prices Surged then Fell 11%
    Feb 4 2026

    Gold prices moved sharply in late January 2026, surging past $5,500 before dropping 11% in a day. The swing ranks among the largest single-day moves in decades.

    In the latest episode of Through the Noise, Prof Campbell Harvey explains the trading dynamics behind the reversal, showing why the episode reflects a rapid correction following an extreme run-up rather than a change in underlying fundamentals.

    The discussion traces how retail buying, institutional momentum strategies, leverage, and margin calls reinforced one another on the way up and again on the way down.

    Cam also addresses claims linking the drop to Federal Reserve leadership news, explaining why that story misses the timing and scale of the move.

    The analysis focuses on how trading dynamics, not new information, drove the reversal.

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    9 mins
  • Gold’s Strength Reflects a Changing World
    Jan 28 2026

    Why have gold prices hit an all-time high, and what’s driving demand for gold now?

    In this episode of Cam Harvey: Through the Noise, Duke Fuqua finance professor Campbell Harvey explains the forces behind the recent surge in gold prices. Cam breaks down why gold supply is uniquely constrained, how its decentralized global production supports its role as a safe haven asset, and why gold has preserved purchasing power over thousands of years despite periods of significant volatility.

    The discussion then turns to demand. Cam examines how the weaponization of the U.S. dollar, growing geopolitical risk, and rising concerns about U.S. debt and fiscal sustainability are leading central banks and governments to reduce reliance on dollar-based assets. As countries look to diversify reserves, gold has increasingly moved to the top of the list.

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    10 mins
  • Understanding the Impact of Interest Rates
    Jan 21 2026

    In this episode of Cam Harvey: Through the Noise, Duke Fuqua finance professor Campbell Harvey joins Assistant Dean Robert Olinger to clarify how interest rates are determined, and why long-term rates matter far more for the economy than short-term moves by the Federal Reserve.

    Cam argues that today’s rate environment is shaped less by Fed policy and more by deep structural forces. From rising U.S. government debt and shifting global capital flows to inflation expectations and AI-driven investment, these pressures are pushing long-term rates higher and limiting how much economic impact policy rate cuts can deliver.

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    10 mins
  • Federal Reserve Independence and the Evolution of Monetary Policy
    Jan 15 2026

    How independent should the Federal Reserve be as its role in the economy continues to expand?

    In the latest episode of Through the Noise, Duke Fuqua professor Cam Harvey examines how modern monetary policy has evolved and what that means for central bank independence, credibility, and long-term economic growth.

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    8 mins
  • Is Today’s AI Boom Another Tech Bubble? Lessons from 1999
    Jan 14 2026

    Are markets experiencing another tech bubble, or is this time fundamentally different?

    In the first episode of Through the Noise, Cam Harvey, Professor of Finance at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, discusses today’s market environment through the lens of the late-1990s tech boom. Joined by Robert Olinger, Assistant Dean at Fuqua, Harvey draws on his firsthand experience from 1999 to assess whether current concerns about overvaluation and AI-driven enthusiasm are justified.

    The conversation examines five key differences between the dot-com era and now, including the nature of artificial intelligence as a productivity-enhancing technology, its broad impact across industries, stronger corporate fundamentals, and the role of institutional memory following past market cycles. Harvey explains why, while market corrections are always possible, comparisons to the 2000 collapse often overlook critical structural differences in today’s economy.

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    10 mins