Gold
has surged dramatically to major breakouts since its usual
summer-doldrums lows. That’s naturally rekindled interest in this
leading alternative investment, despite the record-high stock
markets. Investors are starting to return to gold again to
prudently diversify their stock-heavy portfolios. That’s very
bullish for gold, as investment capital inflows can persist for
months or even years. This shift is most evident in GLD.
The
American SPDR Gold Shares is the world’s leading and dominant gold
exchange-traded fund. Since its birth way back in November 2004, it
has acted as a conduit for the vast pools of stock-market
capital to migrate into and out of physical gold bullion. The
marginal gold investment demand, and sometimes supply, via GLD can
be big and varies wildly. Thus GLD-share trading is often gold’s
primary short-term driver.
The
definitive arbiter of global gold supply and demand is the venerable
World Gold Council. It publishes highly-anticipated quarterly
reports called Gold Demand Trends. They offer the best reads
available on global gold fundamentals. At first glance, it’s not
apparent why gold-ETF demand plays such a massive role in driving
gold’s price action. But digging a little deeper makes this
crucial-to-understand relationship clearer.
According to the WGC, over the past 5 years from 2012 to 2016
jewelry demand averaged about 54% of overall global gold demand.
Total investment demand including physical bars and coins in
addition to gold ETFs averaged just 26%. Breaking that category
down further into bars and coins separate from ETFs, they weighed in
at averages of 28% and -2% of world gold demand respectively over
the past 5 years.
The
key to ETFs’ outsized impact on gold prices is in the extreme
variability of their demand. Across that same span, total gold
demand only varied 10% from the midpoint of its worst year to best
year. For jewelry that variance ran 27%, as gold’s largest demand
category is relatively inelastic to gold’s price. Variability for
bar-and-coin investment was higher at 49%. But that’s still nothing
compared to ETFs’ wild swings.
Global gold-ETF demand between 2012 to 2016 varied radically from a
low of -914.3 metric tons in 2013 to a high of +534.2t in 2016! The
percentages don’t work with a negative number, but that 5-year
variance of 1448.6t is vast beyond belief. Despite global gold-ETF
demand averaging just -2% of total world gold demand over that span
compared to 54% for jewelry, in raw-tonnage terms ETFs’
variability ran 2.2x jewelry’s!
Gold
prices are set at the margin, and capital inflows and outflows via
gold ETFs dwarf changes in every other gold demand category. The
extreme volatility in gold investment demand through ETFs from stock
traders overpowers everything else. When stock investors are buying
gold-ETF shares faster than gold itself is being bought, gold
rallies. That investment buying fuels major uplegs and entire bull
markets in gold.
The
mission of gold ETFs including GLD is to mirror the gold price. But
the supply and demand of ETF shares is independent from
gold’s own. So when stock investors buy gold-ETF shares faster than
gold is being bid higher, those share prices threaten to decouple to
the upside. Gold-ETF managers only have one way to prevent this
tracking failure. They issue new gold-ETF shares to offset that
excess demand.
Selling new gold-ETF shares to stock investors raises capital, which
is then plowed into physical gold bullion held in trust for
shareholders that very day. This process effectively shunts excess
demand for gold-ETF shares into the underlying gold market, bidding
gold higher. Gold ETFs including GLD could not track the gold price
if this mechanism for equalizing differential capital flows between
them didn’t exist.
The
opposite happens when gold-ETF shares are sold faster than gold
itself is being sold. That forces the shares to disconnect from
gold to the downside. Gold ETF managers avert that failure by
stepping in to buy back those excess shares offered. They raise the
capital necessary to sop up this excess supply by selling some of
the gold bullion underlying their ETF. Gold ETFs are a capital
conduit between stocks and gold!
Because of the massive size of the US stock markets, GLD capital
flows are more important to gold than all of the other gold ETFs
around the world combined. GLD’s managers are very transparent,
publishing its physical-gold-bullion holdings daily. That
offers a far-higher-resolution read on what’s going on in gold
investment than the WGC’s quarterly fundamental reports. GLD’s
holdings are the key to gold’s fortunes.
When
GLD’s holdings are rising, that means American stock-market capital
is flowing into the global gold market. When GLD’s holdings are
falling, investors are pulling capital back out of gold. There is
nothing more important for gold’s overall price trends than these
GLD capital flows. From extremes
gold-futures
speculators can overpower GLD’s influence on gold from time to
time, but these eclipsing bouts don’t last long.
I’ve
actively studied GLD’s dominating influence on gold prices for many
years now. The hard data on this is crystal-clear, as we’ll discuss
shortly. But unfortunately many if not most speculators and
investors in gold, silver, and their miners’ stocks still don’t
understand this. You can’t really grasp what’s going on in gold,
and therefore the entire precious-metals complex, if you don’t
closely follow GLD’s holdings daily.
This
week’s chart looks at GLD’s physical gold bullion held in trust for
its shareholders superimposed over the gold price since 2015. When
American stock-market capital is flowing into gold via differential
GLD-share buying, gold rallies. When that capital heads back out,
gold falls. These gold-investment trends often take many months to
play out, and a major new GLD-share buying spree is just getting
underway.

Like
always in the markets, understanding what’s going on today requires
perspective. If you don’t know where we’ve been and why,
you’re not going to be right on where we’re going. I broke the
performances in gold and GLD’s holdings into calendar quarters here
for easier analysis. Back in late 2015, gold was pounded lower
heading into the
Fed’s first rate hike in nearly a decade in the terminal phase
of a brutal bear.
In
Q3’15, gold fell 4.8% on a 3.4% or 24.0t GLD draw. American stock
investors continued jettisoning gold via GLD shares in Q4’15. In
that bear-trough quarter, gold fell 4.9% on a 6.6% or 45.1t GLD draw
driven by heavy differential selling of GLD shares. The resulting
7.3-year secular low in GLD’s physical-gold-bullion holdings held in
trust for shareholders drove gold to a parallel 6.1-year low on
the very same day.
Overall between late-January 2015 and mid-December 2015, gold
plunged 19.3% on a 14.9% or 110.3t GLD draw. When American stock
traders are paring their gold exposure by dumping GLD shares faster
than gold itself is being sold, gold is going to head lower. Per
the WGC, total 2015 gold demand slumped just 0.8% or 35.6t
year-over-year. That was entirely due to total ETF demand falling
128.3t, led by GLD’s 66.6t drop.
But
everything changed dramatically in early 2016 because the lofty US
stock markets plunged sharply in their biggest correction since
mid-2011. Stock investors generally ignore gold until stock markets
start to sell off materially. Then they rush to redeploy in this
ultimate alternative investment. Gold is effectively the
anti-stock trade, a rare asset that moves
counter to stock
markets. So investment demand soars in selloffs.
After being universally despised in hyper-bearishness just a couple
weeks earlier, gold demand started to return in January 2016. The
leading S&P 500 stock index suffered a series of dramatic down days,
including separate 1.5%, 2.4%, 2.5%, 2.2%, and 1.6% losses within
weeks. So scared stock investors remembered gold, and started to
flood back into GLD shares far faster than gold itself was being bid
higher.
Their differential GLD-share buying single-handedly ignited a
new gold bull! In Q1’16, gold rocketed up 16.1% on an epic 27.5% or
176.9t GLD build. According to the latest WGC Q2’17 GDT, total
global gold demand in Q1’16 only rose 179.2t YoY. That means
American stock investors’ heavy GLD-share buying alone was
responsible for a staggering 98.7% of global gold demand growth!
GLD’s gold-price influence is huge.
Q2’16 was similar, with gold powering another 7.4% higher on another
big 16.0% or 130.8t GLD build. The WGC reports that worldwide gold
demand only grew 134.7t YoY that quarter, so the GLD holdings build
driven by stock investors’ differential share buying accounted for
97.1%! Love or hate GLD, the hard truth is gold’s new bull market
never would’ve existed if stock investors hadn’t rushed into
gold via that ETF.
In
essentially the first half of 2016, gold had powered 29.9% higher on
a stunning 55.7% or 351.1t GLD-holdings build. That gold surge
naturally fueled much more investment buying, both in physical bars
and coins and other gold ETFs around the world. But without that
American stock-market capital flowing into gold through the GLD
conduit, odds are little of that parallel buying would’ve happened.
GLD is the key to gold.
Gold
then stalled out in Q3’16 because new record stock-market highs
slammed the door on GLD capital inflows. Stock investors generally
want nothing to do with gold when stocks are soaring. And they did
in the wake of the Brexit surprise on hopes for more central-bank
easing. So gold just consolidated high that quarter,
slipping 0.4% on a 0.2% or 2.1t GLD draw. Gold’s bull halted the
moment differential GLD buying did!
GLD’s dominance reasserted itself in Q4’16, but going the other
way. Opening up a direct gold conduit for the vast pools of
stock-market capital is a double-edged sword. GLD’s holdings
started plummeting in the wake of Trump’s surprise election
victory. The resulting Trumphoria on hopes for big tax cuts soon
fueled surging record stock markets. So investors once again felt
no need to prudently diversify with gold.
That
quarter gold plunged 12.7% on a 13.3% or 125.8t GLD draw. The WGC’s
latest data shows global gold demand fell 117.3t YoY in that
quarter. So the heavy differential GLD-share selling was
responsible for more than all of it! For better or for
worse, the rise of ETF investing to market dominance has made GLD
the overpowering driver of gold’s fortunes. Nothing else has
wielded such huge price influence in recent years.
Unfortunately many traditional gold investors and speculators still
ignore GLD’s holdings. Many don’t like GLD because it’s paper gold,
inferior to physical bars and coins held in your own immediate
possession. I certainly empathize with that. I’ve been
continuously recommending physical gold coins to all
investors since May 2001 when gold was at $264. I’ve never
recommended GLD shares to our subscribers as investments.
But
regardless of whether you think GLD is
an anti-gold
conspiracy or a great new way to entice stock-market capital
into gold, this behemoth can’t be ignored. Following GLD’s vast
impact on gold prices has nothing to do with making a statement on
its fitness. To be successful traders, we have to set our own
emotions and opinions aside. All that matters is what’s driving the
markets and why, not whether we approve.
Between gold’s early-July-2016 initial bull peak and its
mid-December-2016 trough, gold plunged 17.3% on a 14.2% or 138.9t
GLD draw. While that was a massive correction, it technically
wasn’t a bear market because it didn’t cross that -20% threshold.
This means gold has remained continuously in a young bull market
since early 2016. And that bull has reasserted itself this year
just as I
predicted at its post-election bottom.
In
Q1’17 gold indeed powered 8.5% higher out of those deep Trumphoria
lows. But interestingly GLD capital flows weren’t a material
factor, as this ETF only experienced a minor 1.2% or 10.2t build.
Asians had stepped in to buy gold aggressively, usurping the
gold-driving helm from American stock investors. It was remarkable
gold climbed so much, as overall global demand fell 212.7t YoY. Q1
was something of an anomaly.
Some
of that was unwound in Q2’17, the last quarter for which
comprehensive gold fundamental data is now available. Gold slid
0.5% despite a 2.4% or 20.2t GLD build. That compared to overall
world gold demand falling 102.3t YoY. Despite the record US
stock-market highs driven by Trumphoria, American stock investors
were bucking the global trend of selling gold-ETF shares. Overall
ETF demand dropped 181.4t YoY.
But
despite GLD apparently exiting gold’s driver seat, the red
gold-price line above continued to generally mirror GLD’s holdings.
The only reason GLD’s influence faded in the first half of this year
is there wasn’t much differential buying or selling of GLD shares by
American stock investors. The major Trumphoria stock rally left
them largely indifferent to gold. That made room for other gold
drivers to temporarily eclipse GLD.
Last
year the absolute value of GLD’s quarterly holdings changes averaged
108.9t. But so far in the first couple quarters of 2017, that has
collapsed 86% to a mere 15.2t average! Realize when stock investors
start buying or selling GLD shares much faster than gold itself
again, GLD’s dominance of gold’s price will come roaring back with a
vengeance. Its extreme volatility overwhelmingly drives gold at the
margin.
And
that brings us to the current quarter where things are really
getting interesting. Following that huge post-election draw, GLD’s
holdings finally bottomed at 799.1 metric tons in late January.
That low held until late July, when they started falling to a new
post-election low of 786.9t by early August. That was the result of
very-bearish sentiment fueled by gold’s usual
summer-doldrums
lows, its weakest time of the year.
Despite this summer seasonal lull being well-known, it inevitably
freaks out traders. So they succumb to their fears and sell low
at exactly the wrong time, right before
gold’s major
autumn rally. That started to power higher out of the
early-July low right on schedule. But stock investors didn’t take
notice until gold had already surged 6.4% higher to $1290 in just 5
weeks. Then they finally started buying GLD shares again.
GLD’s holdings initially bottomed on August 7th before stalling
there for an entire week. The day after gold challenged $1290,
August 14th, stock investors started to return. Their differential
buying drove a 0.5% holdings build that day, the first in 7 weeks.
That GLD-share buying pressure really accelerated in late August and
early September, where separate major build days of 1.1%, 1.8%, and
1.1% were witnessed.
By
September 5th, GLD’s holdings had powered 6.8% or 53.2t higher in
less than a month! That helped drive a parallel 6.5% gold rally,
catapulting it from $1257 to $1339 over that short span. These new
gold capital inflows from stock investors via GLD are very exciting.
This is the biggest and sharpest GLD build seen since well before
the election, since back in Q2’16. Something big and very
bullish is afoot in gold investment.
American stock investors are starting to return to gold despite the
stock markets remaining near or at all-time record highs. There’s
certainly been no correction or even series of major down days.
Investors are returning to gold without that typical stock-selloff
catalyst. And once swelling gold investment demand starts driving
gold higher, its rally tends to become self-feeding and run for
months on end before petering out.
Investors love chasing winners, nothing drives buying like higher
prices. The more investors bid up gold through differential
GLD-share buying, the more its price rallies. The more gold
rallies, the more other investors want to join in to ride the
momentum. Buying begets buying. To see this starting to
happen in these euphoric stock markets is extraordinary. The
inevitable overdue major selloff will supercharge gold buying.
These lofty Fed-goosed stock markets
are long overdue
for a major correction or more likely a new bear market. Once they
roll over sooner or later here, gold investment demand is going to
explode just like it did back in early 2016 during the last
correction. That stock selling could start soon, as next week
the Fed is widely expected to unveil
quantitative
tightening. That’s every bit as bearish for stocks as QE was
bullish!
Resurgent gold investment demand will once again almost certainly
propel gold dramatically higher, as it did in the first half of
2016. This bull market’s latest growing upleg can be played with
GLD, but that will only pace gold’s gains. Far greater upside can
be found in the gold miners’ stocks, where profits amplify
gold’s gains. The gold stocks recently enjoyed
major breakouts,
but remain deeply
undervalued relative to gold.
The
key to riding any gold-stock bull to multiplying your fortune is
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The
bottom line is gold investment demand is resuming after its massive
post-election slump. Differential GLD-share buying, the dominant
driver of gold’s young bull, just enjoyed its biggest and fastest
surge in over a year. American stock investors are starting to
prudently diversify back into gold, despite the stock markets still
near record highs. Worries are mounting that the long-delayed major
stock selloff is looming.
When
that fateful event inevitably arrives, gold investment demand is
going to explode again just like it did in early 2016. That will
catapult gold, silver, and their miners’ stocks dramatically
higher. Seeing gold investment demand surge recently even without a
stock-selloff catalyst highlights the big latent interest in gold.
Usually moving counter to stocks, it remains the ultimate portfolio
diversifier every investor needs to own. |