Gold
has largely spent the past half-year grinding sideways on balance.
That lack of upside progress has sapped gold’s excitement and
bullishness, leaving investors apathetic. Spawning something of a
vicious circle, gold can’t go anywhere without sustained investment
buying. But when gold isn’t powering higher, investors lose
interest. This indifference dynamic should change soon with major
gold-bullish catalysts aligning.
Secular gold-price trends are overwhelmingly driven by investment
capital flows. While it doesn’t rival jewelry as gold’s largest
demand category, investment is radically more variable. That
volatility makes it the dominant driver of major gold uplegs and
corrections. Global gold investment is opaque though, with
comprehensive data only published quarterly in the World Gold
Council’s fantastic Gold Demand Trends reports.
The
latest covered Q3’21, where gold slumped a slight 0.8%. But that
masks some large intra-quarter selloffs that were part of a broader
9.6% gold correction. Overall global gold demand proved weaker last
quarter, falling 7.1% year-over-year to 830.8 metric tons.
Investment demand was the sole culprit, plummeting 52.5% YoY
to 235.0t! Yet traditional physical bar-and-coin demand stayed
strong, surging 18.4% YoY.
Gold
exchange-traded funds have overwhelmingly become this metal’s
investment-capital-flows wildcard, the tail wagging the gold-price
dog. They collapsed from a massive 273.9t build in Q3’20 to a 26.7t
draw in Q3’21, an enormous 300.6t swing! That dwarfed last
quarter’s mere 63.7t retreat in overall global gold demand.
Gold-ETF capital flows have often proven gold’s dominant driver
for lots of quarters over many years.
And
two American behemoths command the lion’s share of the capital
deployed in gold ETFs worldwide, the GLD SPDR Gold Shares and IAU
iShares Gold Trust. The WGC tracks global physically-backed gold
ETFs in its quarterly GDT reports. As of the end of Q3’21, GLD’s
and IAU’s bullion holdings represented 27.6% and 13.9% of all the
world’s gold ETFs’! Their collective 41.4% compares to a
distant third place’s 6.7%.
Of
that negative 300.6t swing in gold-ETF holdings comparing Q3’21 with
Q3’20, GLD and IAU alone accounted for 214.8t or 71.5%! That’s not
unusual, as GLD+IAU-holdings swings have weighed in at nearly all
or even more than the entire global-gold-ETF space in plenty of
recent quarters. Gold price trends are overwhelmingly driven by
investment demand dominated by gold ETFs, and GLD+IAU are the
biggest.
Instead of quarterly like the WGC’s data, GLD and IAU report their
physical-gold-bullion holdings daily. That makes them the best
high-resolution proxy for global gold investment demand. And
that has proven weak since mid-June, when an unexpected catalyst
prematurely killed a young gold upleg. After gold had just powered
13.5% higher in 2.8 months, mid-June’s FOMC meeting ignited huge
gold-futures selling.
The
Fed didn’t even do anything that day, maintaining its colossal $120b
of monthly quantitative-easing money printing indefinitely with no
hints of tapering. But top Fed officials’ unofficial individual
federal-funds-rate outlooks in the accompanying dot plot proved
hawkish. Merely 6 out of 18 of those guys saw maybe two
quarter-point rate hikes way out into year-end 2023. That
may as well be an eternity away in market time.
The
US Dollar Index shot higher on that, unleashing panic among
gold-futures speculators. Running with hyper-leveraged bets, they
can’t afford to be wrong for long. Gold plummeted 5.2% in just
three trading days on these traders puking out huge amounts
of long contracts. That mid-summer shock first soured investors’
gold psychology, and it hasn’t recovered since. That resulting
apathy drove gold’s sideways grind.
This
chart superimposes GLD+IAU holdings over gold prices during the last
several years. Major gold uplegs and corrections are tagged, along
with the GLD+IAU builds or draws in those spans. Ever since that
mid-summer FOMC dot plot derailed that young gold upleg, investors
have been missing in action. They are indifferent to gold
until it exhibits sufficient upside momentum to attract them, which
hasn’t happened.
 
Gold
price trends are highly correlated with gold-ETF capital
flows, particularly GLD+IAU holdings. Prior to this latest
Fed-truncated upleg squib, gold’s previous two uplegs both maturing
in 2020 were massive. Gold powered 42.7% and 40.0% higher on
enormous GLD+IAU builds of 314.2t and 460.5t! Strong gold-ETF
buying fuels major gold uplegs. The basic mechanics of
physically-backed gold ETFs explain why.
Their mission is to mirror the gold price, but the supply and demand
for gold-ETF shares is independent from the gold-futures trading
driving gold’s global reference price. So differential buying or
selling of GLD and IAU shares relative to gold will soon cause their
prices to decouple from the metal’s that they need to track. These
gold ETFs’ managers avert these failures by issuing new or buying
back gold-ETF shares.
When
GLD and IAU share prices are being bid higher faster than gold,
their managers have to sell shares to offset that excess demand.
They use the proceeds to buy more physical gold bullion. So rising
GLD+IAU holdings, which are called builds, reveal stock-market
capital flowing into gold. These monster gold ETFs are
effectively conduits for the vast pools of American stock-market
capital to slosh into and out of gold.
Conversely when GLD and IAU shares are being sold faster than gold,
their prices will soon disconnect from gold’s to the downside. ETF
managers have to absorb that excess supply by buying back their own
shares. They raise the necessary funds by liquidating some of their
physical-gold-bullion holdings. So falling GLD+IAU holdings or
draws show stock capital shifting back out of gold, which we’ve seen
since June.
Gold-ETF capital flows tend to lag gold upleg-and-correction cycles,
because investors are momentum players. They aren’t
interested in buying anything including gold until after it has been
rallying persistently and considerably for some time. So even
though gold’s last correction after mid-2020’s massive upleg
bottomed in early March 2021, GLD+IAU holdings didn’t hit their own
trough of 1,512.8t until late April.
But
with gold decisively powering higher again, the investors started
returning to chase that momentum. By mid-June shortly after that
fateful FOMC dot plot, GLD+IAU holdings had climbed a modest 2.9% or
44.0t. But gold’s distant-future-rate-hikes-scare plunge, and
several subsequent bouts of
heavy-to-extreme
gold-futures selling, shattered investors’ nascent bullishness.
They’ve been gradually fleeing since.
While the GLD+IAU draws since mid-June have been fairly-mild,
they’ve proven relentless. Gold itself bottomed in late September
after a 9.6% correction fueled by that outsized gold-futures
dumping. Yet GLD+IAU holdings kept grinding lower into early
November, clocking in at a substantial 5.5% or 85.7t total draw.
With investment capital migrating out of gold, even big gold-futures
buying couldn’t spark an upleg.
Major gold uplegs like last year’s are three-stage affairs. Their
initial sharp gains out of deep lows are fueled by speculators
buying to cover profitable gold-futures short contracts. The
resulting gold surges soon attract in other gold-futures specs on
the long side. But despite their
big influence
over short-term gold prices due to the huge leverage
inherent in gold futures, these traders’ capital firepower is very
finite.
That
stage-one short covering and stage-two long buying can only run for
a couple-few months before it exhausts itself. That needs to drive
gold high enough for long enough to convince investors to
return. Their vastly-larger stage-three buying can run for many
months or even years, ultimately catapulting gold way higher.
Fleeting gold-futures buying acts like the necessary trigger to spin
up sustained investment buying.
That
gold-bullish flywheel dynamic almost spun back to life in November.
Enormous spec gold-futures long buying drove gold a sharp 8.2%
higher between late September to mid-November. That started to
break though investors’ festering apathy, leading to the biggest
GLD+IAU holdings build since May when gold was surging. But
unfortunately the necessary gold-buying handoff from speculators to
investors failed.
The
baton was dropped when specs’ gold-futures long buying exhausted
itself before enough investors started migrating back into
gold. The primary trigger failed to ignite way-larger secondary
buying in time. Speculators’ upside bets on gold were so
overextended that another bout of heavy gold-futures selling
erupted, the fourth since mid-June. Investors were demoralized
enough to stop differentially-buying gold-ETF shares.
Gold
has spent the past-half year grinding sideways on balance because
apathetic investors are missing in action. Note in this chart
that gold’s 200-day moving average, which illuminates its short-term
trend, is closely following GLD+IAU holdings lower. The next gold
upleg again depends on gold-futures buying forcing gold high enough
for long enough to convince investors to return. That is probably
coming soon.
Several major gold-bullish catalysts are coalescing around a common
linchpin of raging inflation. As this comes to a head,
investors’ vexing gold apathy will be shattered. Facing a situation
never before seen in market history, they will likely flock back to
gold with a vengeance. This leading alternative asset is an
essential portfolio diversifier, tending to rally when stock markets
swoon. It is also the ultimate inflation hedge.
Back
into March 2020 US stock markets plummeted 33.9% in less than five
weeks in a full-blown panic on pandemic-lockdown fears. Fed
officials freaked out, redlining their monetary printing presses
like there was no tomorrow. Radically accelerating the
already-underway QE4 campaign, the Fed’s balance sheet skyrocketed.
As of its latest read last week, it had soared a terrifying
108.0% higher in just 21.2 months!
The
Fed effectively doubled the US monetary base in just over a
year-and-a-half, wildly unprecedented. That deluge added up to an
insane $4,492b of new dollars injected into the system in that
span. That left relatively-far-more money competing for and bidding
up the prices on relatively-less goods and services in the economy.
This profligate Fed’s extreme monetary excess directly drove the
raging inflation rampant today.
Back
in the early 1960s, legendary American economist Milton Friedman
warned “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.”
Today’s Fed officials blaming the soaring prices on supply-chain
disruptions is a red herring. Demand for everything is
artificially-high because the Fed monetized an epic $3,118b in
US Treasuries since March 2020! Ports are snarled because excess
money drove excess demand.
The
Fed’s much-hyped accelerated QE4 tapering will do nothing to address
inflation. Even if the FOMC doubles the monthly pace of slowing its
money printing, QE4 will still total $4,940b by March! All that new
money remains in the economy, and can only be removed through
quantitative-tightening bond selling. The Fed has no intention
of unwinding QE, as big QT would tank these lofty stock markets
triggering a depression.
Stock prices initially benefit from extreme monetary excess, as
evident in the flagship US S&P 500 stock index soaring 110.3% higher
from late March 2020 to mid-November 2021. It’s no coincidence that
those huge gains closely match the Fed’s disturbing 108.0%
balance-sheet ballooning! Those money-growth-driven gains left the
S&P 500 dangerously-overvalued, and thus ripe for a serious bear
market as the Fed tightens.
The
500 elite stocks in that leading benchmark entered December trading
at average trailing-twelve-month price-to-earnings ratios way up
at 32.7x! That’s well into formal bubble territory, which
starts at 28x earnings. That in turn is double the
century-and-a-half fair-value of 14x. Corporate profits still don’t
support prevailing stock prices even with artificially-boosted
demand, and inflation will wreak havoc on earnings.
The
Fed’s doubling of the monetary base has unleashed massive price
inflation in corporations’ input costs necessary to make
their products. Eating these higher costs directly cuts into
bottom-line profits, which will force bubble valuations even
higher. Alternatively companies can raise selling prices to pass
along their cost inflation to customers. But higher prices retard
sales, which also weighs heavily on earnings.
Either way inflation is going to erode corporate profits with
stock markets already trading well into bubble territory! That will
force valuations even higher, amplifying the odds a major bear
market will awaken to forcibly reconnect stock prices with
underlying corporate earnings. The bear-ignition risk is
exaggerated by the FOMC and Fed officials talking tough on
accelerating their QE taper and starting to hike rates soon after.
Investors haven’t been interested in gold because it lacked
sufficient upside momentum. But a big factor in that apathy was the
stunning record-high stock markets. Since November 2020, the Fed’s
deluge of new money has catapulted the S&P 500 to an astounding 76
new all-time-record closing highs! That has bred extraordinary
complacency, leaving stock traders convinced the Fed has
eradicated market cycles.
If
stocks do nothing but rally on epic central-bank money printing,
then why diversify into counter-moving gold? Gold investment is
virtually zero, as evident in a leading proxy. Exiting November,
the total value of GLD+IAU holdings was $85.4b. That was just
0.2% of the collective $41,932.8b market capitalizations of all
the S&P 500 stocks! All-in Fed-goosed stocks, American investors
aren’t prepared for an overdue bear.
But
one is looming as the Fed ends its easy-money gravy train, first by
slowing its epic money printing and then by hiking rates. That
still leaves $4.9t of new QE4 money in the system, continuing
to directly fuel raging inflation. That will ravage corporate
profits, leaving these bubble-valued stock markets even more
dangerously-overvalued. The more the Fed tightens or threatens to,
the more selling pressure will mount.
As
investors watch this train wreck play out, they’ll remember gold.
Their apathy will thaw when the central-bank-conjured illusion of
perpetually-high stock markets fades then vanishes. Even a slight
shift in portfolio allocations back into gold will catapult its
price way higher. For millennia the prudent standard for gold was
considered 5% to 10% of investment portfolios. That is 25x to
50x above today’s implied levels!
So
overlooking gold in this environment will prove a big mistake. The
Fed has never before doubled its balance sheet in a
year-and-a-half! Without that epic deluge of freshly-conjured
money, stock markets can’t remain at bubble valuations. The more
the Fed fights the inflation unleashed by its own monetary excess,
the more downside pressure stock markets will face. That will
greatly boost gold investment demand.
Gold’s day in the sun is coming, there’s no doubt. Technically
since last summer it has been in a giant pennant formation, as
evident in this chart. Rising upleg support since March 2021 is
converging with falling correction resistance since August 2020.
Breakouts from these continuation patterns usually happen in
the same direction they were entered, which was upwards during
2020’s massive gold uplegs.
The
biggest beneficiary of returning investment capital flows driving
gold much higher remains
the gold stocks.
The larger majors
tend to amplify gold’s upside by 2x to 3x, while the
smaller mid-tiers
and juniors often do much better. Like the metal that drives
their profits, the gold stocks are really out of favor today.
They are deeply undervalued relative to the earnings they are
generating, and those will soar with higher gold.
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The
bottom line is gold has mostly ground sideways for a half-year
because investors are apathetic. As momentum players, they aren’t
interested in gold until it powers high enough for long enough to
convince them its gains are sustainable. With that not happening,
gold has suffered gradual-yet-persistent capital outflows since
mid-summer. Recent gold-futures buying didn’t last long enough to
spark investment buying.
But
this gold indifference will end. Inflation is raging due to the Fed
more than doubling its balance sheet since the stock panic. That
monetary deluge inflated a gigantic stock-market bubble, and soaring
input costs are increasingly eroding corporate profits. The Fed is
trying to fight its own inflation by talking tough on slowing QE and
hiking rates. Tightening will force stock markets to roll over,
quickly returning gold to favor. |