Gold
has proven very strong in recent months, powering up to many new
records. All these naturally fueled more-bullish sentiment, leaving
traders expecting more gains. While this gold bull is indeed likely
to rally much higher in coming months, the risks of a pullback are
mounting. Gold’s primary short-term driver is speculators’
gold-futures positioning, which has grown very overextended and due
to reverse.
For
better or worse, these traders punch way above their weights in
bullying around gold prices. Their outsized impact derives from the
extreme leverage inherent in gold futures. At $2,500 gold, each
100-ounce futures contract controls $250,000 worth. Yet speculators
are now only required to keep $10,500 cash margins in their accounts
for each outstanding contract. That makes for
huge 23.8x maximum leverage!
To
put this into perspective, since 1974 the legal limit in stock
markets has been 2x. Near 24x, each dollar deployed in gold futures
has 24x the price impact on gold as a dollar invested
outright! And the risks of being wrong are dreadful, as a mere 4.2%
gold price move against specs’ bets would wipe out 100% of their
capital risked. That forces these guys to maintain myopic
ultra-short-term trading time horizons.
Rather than months or weeks, such extreme leverage demands focusing
on days or hours. No one can afford to be wrong for long at 24x,
which is exceedingly-unforgiving. Gold-futures specs have to react
to gold-moving news very quickly, shifting capital fast. And their
most-watched catalysts have long been major US-economic-data
releases, including both consumer and wholesale inflation and
monthly jobs reports.
The
latest iteration of the latter was released a week ago on Jobs
Friday, proving terrible. The Bureau of Labor Statistics claimed
the US economy only created 142k jobs in August, under the +161k
expected. On top of that prior-two-month revisions were really
negative, slashing away 86k previously-claimed jobs! I’ve
long believed revisions should be added to the current headline,
which would’ve crushed it to just +56k.
The
internals proved ugly too. Last month crappier part-time jobs
soared 527k, while superior full-time jobs collapsed 438k.
In addition 1,325k native-born Americans left the payrolls, while
635k foreign-born people took jobs. That rare headline
nonfarm-payrolls miss was also the second in a row after the BLS
originally reported July at +114k versus +185k expected. All that
was certainly dovish for Fed rate cuts.
Speculators have long aggressively bought gold futures on Fed-dovish
jobs reports, implying labor-market weakness. Their leveraged
buying drives big gold gains on those Jobs Fridays, from 1% to 2%+.
Yet this past Friday, gold’s initial post-data surge was constrained
at just +0.5%. Then it reversed to plunge 1.5% in intraday trading
before rebounding some to a -0.7% close. Such abnormal weakness
spawned some worries.
I
heard from plenty of our newsletter subscribers wondering why the
heck gold sold off after such ugly monthly jobs data. There was
some Fedspeak interpreted as more hawkish than traders expected that
day, which contributed. But the main reason gold didn’t surge to
another record close was specs’ gold-futures positioning is
overextended. They don’t have much available capital firepower
left to do big buying.
While these guys wield outsized influence over gold prices, their
ranks are small. Only a tiny fraction of all traders are bold
enough or foolish enough to run 10x, 20x, and even sometimes 30x+
leverage on volatile gold. And the amount of capital they
collectively control is also really little compared to broader
markets. Gold-futures speculators can only do so much buying before
they exhaust their capital firepower.
The
best way I’ve found to infer how much of that is likely available or
has been expended is looking at specs’ total longs and shorts
compared to their trading ranges in recent years. This chart
superimposes gold over both, showing whether spec longs and shorts
are relatively-high or -low. Gold’s pullback risks are really
mounting given their overall positioning today. That implies a
buy-lower opportunity is nearing.
Gold’s current upleg has proven a remarkable record breakout surge,
soaring a mighty 38.7% at best in 10.8 months as of late August!
Gold’s first new
nominal record in 3.3 years was achieved back in early December,
and gold has powered to 28 more since then. A year ago $2,050
would’ve seemed really high, yet now $2,500 is starting to feel
normal! Some unique drivers contributed to gold’s powerful
upleg.
Its
centerpiece was blasting up 20.0% between mid-February to mid-April.
Gold-futures buying certainly played a role in that, with total
spec longs soaring 67.3k contracts higher. Yet all that came during
the first half of
gold’s remarkable breakout surge, then gold-futures buying
vanished. As analyzed extensively in our subscription newsletters,
Chinese investors and world central banks took the
gold-buying baton.
Due
to gold-futures speculators’ finite capital, uplegs driven solely by
them typically enjoy 20%-to-25% gains at best. This 39% one
challenging 40%+ monster status has grown much larger thanks to
atypical outsized buying from Chinese and central bankers. But
considered across this entire gold upleg, specs’ gold-futures buying
has still been massive. They continued to dominate gold over much
of this upleg’s life.
Measured from gold’s early-October bottoming to late August’s latest
interim high, they added a colossal 124.4k long contracts while
buying to cover another 86.0k short ones. Combining for 210.3k,
that was the equivalent of 654.2 metric tons of gold! But specs’
gold-futures positioning is only reported weekly in the Commitments
of Traders reports, current to Tuesday closes that don’t perfectly
match gold’s troughs and peaks.
If
total spec buying is instead considered from the CoT Tuesdays
closest to gold’s upleg-to-date span, their buying grows to 143.7k
longs and 82.4k shorts. That combines for 703.2t in
gold-equivalent terms! This is enormous by any standard, specs have
been huge gold-futures buyers. They have done so much buying that
their probable capital firepower available for fueling this gold
upleg has mostly been expended.
Major gold uplegs are birthed by frenzied gold-futures short
covering. Back in early October spec shorts had soared to a lofty
174.4k contracts, which wasn’t far under late September 2022’s
3.8-year high of 185.3k! In recent years spec shorts have found
strong secular support around 95k contracts. They were
already covered down to that point by late January 2024, stalling
before oddly falling much lower into late June.
That
was a deep 4.1-year secular low, implying specs have fully
exhausted their short covering. Indeed those contracts have
rebounded near their support since. While spec shorts can go lower,
precedent argues they aren’t likely to and if they do such extremes
won’t last long. Specs have vastly more room to short sell
aggressively from here than keep buying, which is short-term-bearish
for gold and somewhat worrying.
Spec
longs are way more important for gold’s fortunes. Since this gold
upleg was born, on average spec longs have outnumbered shorts by
a whopping 3.3x! So longs have proportionally-more influence on
gold’s short-term price action. Back in early October when gold
bottomed, total spec longs were really low at just 264.8k
contracts. But since then they soared as high as 408.5k in late
August, challenging resistance.
That
has run around 415k contracts in recent years. While total spec
longs can briefly surge higher on excessive greed and euphoria, such
spikes reverse sharply within weeks. Once total spec longs hit and
exceed their secular resistance, probabilities heavily favor an
imminent reversal. Largely out of capital firepower to keep
buying gold futures, speculators have far more room to sell their
excessively-bullish bets.
Triggering big mean-reversion long dumping and serious shorting
usually requires some notable catalyst, like Fed-hawkish
inflation-data or jobs upside surprises. A recent case in point was
Jobs Friday in early June, when the BLS reported the US added a huge
272k jobs in May compared to +190k expected. Gold plummeted 3.6% on
close that day, its worst daily loss in 3.6 years! But some
China-central-bank data contributed.
With
the Fed’s long-awaited and hyper-anticipated next rate-cutting cycle
recently increasingly targeted for starting at next week’s FOMC
meeting, specs haven’t felt compelled to dump gold futures. So gold
has remained more resilient than it ought to given such lopsided
gold-futures positioning. But downside risks abound while spec
shorts remain super-low and spec longs really-high, big selling
could erupt anytime.
Despite the Fed guaranteeing a maiden cut next week, that FOMC
meeting could still spark major gold-futures selling. With
every-other FOMC decision including this imminent one, the Fed
releases its top officials’ projections for its federal-funds rate
in coming years. The last dot plot published in mid-June implied
just one 25-basis-point rate cut in 2024 followed by another four in
2025, for 125bp of projected cuts.
The
new dot plot will almost certainly include more than five cuts by
the end of next year, but maybe not enough for traders. Their
futures-implied rate cuts exiting August totaled 100bp in 2024
before another 108bp in 2025, or over eight total cuts! If
top Fed officials only see six or seven, the gold-futures guys might
not like that. Especially if currency traders consider it
Fed-hawkish-enough to really bid up the US dollar.
Periodic mid-upleg pullbacks are healthy and essential to rebalance
sentiment, bleeding off greed before it soars to upleg-slaying
extremes. They typically force gold at least back to its 50-day
moving average, which is $2,445 midweek. But in both late June and
late July, gold fell well under its 50dma. Gold could easily plunge
all the way to lower support of this past summer’s
high-consolidation trading range, or $2,300!
That
would make for a large 8.9% total pullback since late August,
nearing 10%+ correction levels. I’m not forecasting that, but it
wouldn’t be unusual at all. Gold and gold-stock speculators and
investors need to be ready for a bigger selloff given specs’
excessively-bullish gold-futures positioning. That includes
having trailing stop losses on trades and preparing shopping lists
for new trades as gold starts bottoming.
Yet
despite specs’ mostly-expended gold-futures buying, they don’t
necessarily have to sell soon. If gold keeps powering higher on
balance on Chinese-investor and central-bank buying, specs might not
be spooked into dumping. If top Fed officials signal more, bigger,
or faster rate cuts than traders expect, the gold-futures guys’
worries that could spawn selling will wane. One more factor is
gold’s biggest wildcard of all.
Extraordinarily American stock investors who usually play a major
role in fueling monster gold uplegs have been totally missing in
action during this one! I wrote a whole essay last week
analyzing that and why
gold’s demand
comeback will be super-bullish for it. Sooner or later gold
will have powered high enough for long enough to finally attract
back American stock investors to gold-ETF shares, accelerating
gold’s upside.
The
major gold ETFs act as conduits for the vast pools of stock-market
capital to slosh into gold, and that can easily overpower whatever
the way-smaller gold-futures speculators are doing. So this gold
upleg could still surge considerably higher before inevitable
mean-reversion gold-futures selling kicks in. Yet still
gold-selloff risks are high when total spec longs are
excessively-high and total spec shorts are super-low.
Instead of being feared, healthy pullbacks create the best mid-upleg
buying opportunities. Especially in gold stocks, which leverage
gold’s material price swings around 2x to 3x. Thanks to these high
prevailing gold prices,
gold-mining
profits have soared to spectacular record heights!
Gold-stock prices still need to double to quadruple to reflect
$2,500 gold, let alone where it is heading as this powerful secular
bull grows.
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The
bottom line is gold pullback risks are mounting. Speculators’
super-leveraged gold-futures trading is the dominant driver of
gold’s short-term price action. These traders have done massive
buying during this upleg, leaving their shorts well under secular
support and longs challenging secular resistance. Such positioning
implies their likely capital firepower for buying has largely been
exhausted, which is gold-bearish.
Any
day some catalyst could spark major gold-futures selling which could
quickly snowball, slamming gold into a larger pullback. Especially
if the US dollar surges big on some Fed-hawkish news. But this
doesn’t guarantee an imminent gold selloff. If gold continues
rallying on balance with Chinese investors, central banks, or even
American stock investors soon buying, specs shouldn’t be in any
hurry to dump gold futures. |