Gold
looked on the ropes heading into this week’s major Fed decision.
With the Federal Open Market Committee expected to double the pace
of its quantitative-easing tapering and pencil in more rate hikes
sooner, gold-futures speculators were on a hair-trigger. The FOMC
indeed proved every bit as hawkish as feared, yet gold rallied!
Successfully weathering that risky event is very bullish, motivating
buyers to return.
Gold
has suffered tough sledding over this past half-year, mostly
grinding sideways to lower. That lack of sustainable upside
momentum left sentiment increasingly-bearish. Investors are
indifferent, deserting the yellow metal when there are insufficient
upside gains to chase. My essay last week explored this vexing
gold investment
apathy in depth. When investors’ capital flows dry up, gold is
left at the mercy of futures trading.
The
gold-futures speculators don’t command much capital compared to
investors’ vast pools, but they punch way above their weights on
gold-price impact. That’s mostly due to the extreme leverage
inherent in gold-futures trading. Specs now only need $7,500
cash in their trading accounts for each contract that controls 100
troy ounces of gold. That’s worth $180,000 at $1,800 gold, making
for maximum leverage of 24.0x!
24x
is huge absolutely, despite not being notably high relative to gold
futures’ history. Specs’ capital firepower is greatly amplified
when running near margin limits. Every speculation dollar used to
buy or sell gold futures at 24x leverage affects gold prices 24x
more than an investment dollar used to buy or sell gold
outright! Specs’ outsized gold influence is even greater since
gold’s futures price is the world reference one.
So
leveraged gold-futures trading bullying gold prices around really
affects investors’ psychology. These consummate momentum
players are far more likely to migrate capital into gold when it’s
being driven higher by gold-futures buying. The opposite is also
true, gold-futures selling leaves investors apathetic at best and
more likely to pull capital back out of gold. The futures-trading
tail wags the far-larger investment dog!
That’s the whole story behind gold’s grinding consolidation since
last summer. Periodic bouts of big-to-extreme gold-futures selling
flared, briefly hammering gold lower. Those were all driven by
specs’ fears of Fed tightening. The crazy leverage they run
necessitates an ultra-myopic focus compressing trading time horizons
into only hours or days. At 24x, a mere 4.2% adverse move in gold
wipes out 100% of capital risked!
To
understand why gold’s contrary reaction to this week’s uber-hawkish
FOMC is super-bullish, you have to remember gold’s causal chain
getting here. This chart superimposes gold’s price action over the
last few years on speculators’ positioning in gold-futures long and
short contracts. That low-resolution data is disclosed weekly in
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s famous Commitments of
Traders reports.
 
Speculators and investors alike have a debilitating immediacy
bias, weighting recent price action so heavily they soon forget
essential longer-term context. This
what-have-you-done-for-me-lately shortsighted focus on the present
is why gold has been so out of favor recently. It sure shouldn’t be
after a pair of mighty bull uplegs peaked in early March 2020 and
early August 2020 at huge 42.7% and 40.0% absolute gains!
The
latter left gold
extremely overbought and ripe for a healthy correction to
rebalance sentiment. That unfolded into early March 2021, bottoming
at an 18.5% loss. That cleared the decks for gold to resume
powering higher again in its next bull upleg. That soon got
underway and proved solid, with gold rallying 13.5% by early June.
All systems were go for that to grow much larger, but it was
derailed by a hawkish Fed.
The
FOMC meets eight times per year to adjust monetary policy, about
every six weeks. Gold-futures speculators hang on Fed officials’
every word, looking for clues about what’s likely coming. The
fortunes of the US dollar are heavily dependent on traders’ outlooks
for Fed easing and tightening. Since gold is a competing world
currency, it tends to move in lockstep opposition motivating futures
speculators to trade in-line.
Gold’s recent woes were spawned by mid-June’s FOMC meeting. Neither
that FOMC statement nor the Fed chair in his subsequent press
conference hinted at slowing the Fed’s colossal QE money printing or
hiking rates, there was no official hawkishness. But
quarterly at every other meeting the FOMC releases a supplementary
Summary of Economic Projections document, which includes the
infamous dot plots.
Those are unofficial individual projections from top Fed
officials for federal-funds-rate levels in coming years. The Fed
chair himself
warned about the dots in his press conference that very day.
“They’re not a Committee forecast, they’re not a plan. ... the dots
are not a great forecaster of future rate moves ... dots to be taken
with a big grain of salt.” Jerome Powell warned traders to ignore
the almost-always-wrong dot plot.
That
day merely a third of top Fed officials forecast maybe two
quarter-point rate hikes way out into year-end 2023! In
market terms that may as well have been an eternity away. But the
US Dollar Index surged dramatically on that initial intimation of
distant-future rate hikes, unleashing extreme gold-futures selling.
Over three trading days starting with the FOMC, gold plunged a
brutal 5.2% on a huge 1.9% USDX rally.
CoT
reporting weeks for specs’ gold-futures positioning end on
Tuesdays. The CoT week straddling that fateful mid-June FOMC
meeting saw these traders liquidate an enormous 24.0k long contracts
while short selling another 4.9k! Anything over 20k on either the
long or short side in any single CoT week is huge. Together that
serious puking added up to the equivalent of 89.7 metric tons of
gold selling, too much to digest.
The
gold-futures specs were solely to blame for that mid-summer gold
plunge, investors were actually buyers. As discussed in my
gold-investment-apathy essay last week, the best high-resolution
proxy for global gold investment demand is the daily holdings
changes in the dominant GLD SPDR Gold Shares and IAU iShares Gold
Trust gold exchange-traded funds. They actually enjoyed a nice
build in that span.
During those same three trading days after mid-June’s hawkish-dots
surprise, GLD+IAU holdings climbed 0.6% or 9.2t. Rising holdings
reveal gold buying, stock-market capital migrating into the yellow
metal. But gold’s sharp plunge back below its critical
200-day-moving-average upleg support unleashed major
psychological damage that has festered since. That single event
broke the back of mounting gold bullishness.
But
gold-futures speculators’ capital is very finite, so major buying or
selling quickly exhausts itself. Gold started recovering in
July, regaining its 200dma. Yet Fed-hawkishness-driven gold-futures
selling soon flared again in early August, on the granddaddy of all
market-moving economic reports. The latest US monthly jobs proved
better than expected, leaving traders more convinced the Fed would
have to soon tighten.
The
USDX surged 0.8% over a couple trading days starting on that Jobs
Friday, unleashing gold-futures selling intense enough to bludgeon
gold 4.1% lower. That included a rare Sunday-evening
gold-futures
shorting attack. During the CoT week straddling that second
summer gold plunge, specs short-sold an epic 35.7k contracts or the
equivalent of 110.9t of gold! That was the third-largest CoT week
of shorting ever.
But
as extreme gold-futures selling is never sustainable, gold quickly
recovered and regained all its jobs-report losses by early
September. Then another upside surprise in more economic data shook
loose yet more gold-futures selling. Mid-month US retail sales beat
expectations, likely on rising prices since that data isn’t adjusted
for inflation. That left traders more convinced the Fed would have
to soon start tightening.
Specs again freaked out, spewing enough gold-futures selling to
hammer gold 2.2% lower that day as the USDX surged 0.4%. Investors
weren’t shaken, as GLD+IAU holdings enjoyed a slight 0.1% or 1.5t
build that day. In the CoT week straddling that third summer gold
selloff, specs dumped 21.6k total contracts on both sides of the
trade. That added up to the equivalent of 67.2t of gold jettisoned
in that short span.
The
FOMC was meeting again the following week in late September, and was
widely expected to lay out a timeline for starting to slow its
colossal money printing from its fourth quantitative-easing
campaign. In that very FOMC statement itself, the upcoming QE4
taper was pre-announced. Leveraged gold-futures speculators feared
another ugly taper tantrum like back in June 2013 when the
QE3 taper was announced.
That
original QE taper hadn’t been telegraphed in advance, so it shocked
traders at the time. In seven trading days starting with that FOMC
meeting, gold collapsed a brutal 12.3%! In a couple essays in mid-
and late-September 2021, I argued that gold’s QE4 taper tantrum
had largely
already happened. Those bouts of extreme gold-futures selling
last summer in
anticipation of Fed tightening mostly exhausted its potential.
Over
the next week or so after that late-September FOMC meeting, gold
still swooned a bit further with a 2.8% loss on a 1.3% USDX surge.
Specs had dumped another 22.5k gold-futures longs and shorts in that
FOMC-straddling CoT week, the equivalent of 70.0t of gold.
Investors were starting to worry a little, with GLD+IAU holdings
slipping 0.7% or 10.2t in that span. That was still a small
fraction of futures selling.
Yet
again inherently-limited gold-futures selling soon petered out, so
gold rebounded in October. At its next meeting in early November,
the FOMC officially launched its QE4 taper. The massive
$120b per month of QE4 money printing would be reduced by $15b each
month until it was finished. At that pace, QE4’s bond monetizations
would finally end by June. That tapering would add on another $420b
to QE4’s size.
By
the time the dust settled, QE4 would have ballooned to an
inconceivably-colossal $5.1t! As of that QE4-taper day, fully
19/20ths of QE4 had happened in just 20.3 months since March
2020’s pandemic-lockdown stock panic. Fed officials had feared its
negative wealth effect would spawn a full-blown depression, so they
started printing money like there was no tomorrow. The Fed’s
balance sheet skyrocketed 106.2%!
The
goofy gold-futures speculators should never have assumed QE4
tapering is bearish for gold. Merely slowing the pace of money
printing leaves that vast deluge of $5.1t of freshly-conjured US
dollars still in the economy. This quickly-doubled money supply
competing for and bidding up the prices on far-slower-growing goods
and services is the sole reason inflation is raging out of control.
Tapering leaves QE4 intact.
That
monetary deluge can only be unwound by quantitative tightening,
the Fed selling the bonds it bought in QE4 to destroy the trillions
of dollars of money wished into existence. QT isn’t even on the
table, since it would crash these lofty
QE-levitated US
stock markets. Maybe gold-futures specs started to realize this
after early November’s FOMC meeting, or maybe their selling
firepower had simply been exhausted.
Whatever the reason, huge gold-futures buying erupted in the
CoT week straddling that formal QE4-taper launch. Relieved that
gold didn’t plunge on that news, specs flooded back into longs
adding a gargantuan 34.2k contracts. That along with slight short
covering added up to the equivalent of 110.8t of gold buying! That
helped propel gold 8.2% higher by mid-November, despite Fed
officials talking tougher on tightening.
Unfortunately specs’ positioning in gold-futures longs grew
overextended, so a rebalancing selloff soon erupted after Biden
renominated Jerome Powell for another Fed-chair term. With
investors still missing in action, big gold-futures selling hammered
the yellow metal lower. Investors don’t return until gold-futures
buying drives gold high enough for long enough to convince them
upside momentum is back, which hadn’t happened.
Between mid-June and this week, all gold’s significant volatility
was fully explainable by gold-futures selling and buying! Huge
gold-futures selling had flared on distant-future rate hikes,
better-than-expected US economic data, and the QE4-taper
pre-announcement. But that reversed to extreme gold-futures buying
when the FOMC actually kicked off the QE4 taper. Yet how would gold
weather soaring rate-hike odds?
There’s no doubt gold-futures specs were worried heading into this
week’s uber-hawkish FOMC meeting. Would some surprise in the FOMC
statement, dot plot, or Powell’s post-meeting press conference spark
another bout of heavy gold-futures selling? Fears of that left gold
relatively-low technically, on the verge of a breakdown this week if
more selling erupted. I argued the contrarian side in our weekly
newsletter Tuesday.
On
FOMC eve this week I pointed out that federal-funds futures were
already pricing in plenty of rate hikes next year, so hawkish
dots shouldn’t be a surprise. Markets were expecting the first
quarter-point hike in May 2022, with better-than-even odds for the
second by mid-June. Thus hawkish dots should “prove another big
sell-the-rumor-buy-the-news event for gold” like late September’s
QE4-taper pre-announcement.
This
Wednesday the FOMC indeed doubled the pace of its QE4 taper as
expected, ramping that to a $30b-per-month reduction in money
printing starting in January. That meant QE4 will be finished a few
months earlier in March, paving the way for rate hikes sooner.
And the accompanying dot plot was every-bit-as-hawkish as feared.
The previous late-September one barely had one rate hike in 2022 and
another in 2023.
But
the raging-if-not-runaway inflation unleashed by this profligate
Fed’s insane QE4 money printing has finally galvanized Fed officials
into thinking about acting. So in this week’s new dot plot, their
individual projections revealed fully three rate hikes in 2022
then another three following that in 2023! That was one of the
most-dramatic pulling forwards of and intensifying a coming
rate-hike cycle that has ever been witnessed.
So
with a new rate-hike cycle looming larger and faster than
almost anyone imagined just a few months ago, gold-futures
speculators had every excuse to run for the hills. But they didn’t
in the wake of one of the most-hawkish FOMC meetings on record!
Whether they expected such a huge jump in coming rate hikes or their
selling firepower had already dwindled too much, they stood their
ground so gold rallied a bit.
The
contrast between gold’s reaction to the mid-June and mid-December
FOMC meetings was stunning. Last summer gold plunged 5.2% in
several trading days on the dots showing two potential rate hikes
way out into year-end 2023. This week gold rallied in the wake
of new dots revealing three imminent rate hikes starting next
spring with another three following in 2023! Gold’s resiliency in
this test is super-bullish.
That
implies speculators are mostly done dumping gold futures
regardless of what the Fed does. And that sure makes sense.
QE4 is now running $4,922b over 26.9 months, of which $4,506b came
during the 21.4 months since March 2020’s stock panic. QE tapering
leaves that vast monetary excess baked into the system, continuing
to bid up prices. Gold has been the ultimate monetary-inflation
hedge for millennia.
It’s
hard to imagine a more-bullish environment for gold than with a
rapidly-more-than-doubled money supply. Gold was averaging about
$1,575 in early 2020 before the stock panic, and all the Fed’s crazy
money printing since should eventually fuel gold more than
doubling in proportion. That would take it up near $3,150, way
higher than today’s piddling $1,800. And Fed-rate-hike cycles are
no threat to gold either.
The
last one ran from December 2015 to December 2018, when the Fed
hiked its FFR nine times for 225 basis points total. Eight of
those hikes were grouped together in streaks of three and five done
at consecutive FOMC meetings, like Fed officials are implying in
2022. During the exact span of
that rate-hike
cycle, gold rallied 17.0%. During the
11 previous
rate-hike cycles since 1971, gold averaged strong 26.9% gains!
So
there’s nothing inherently bearish for gold about the Fed raising
its federal-funds-rate target. And with QE4 now scheduled to top
$5.0t by March when this taper ends, gold should power
dramatically higher in coming years on this
radically-unprecedented monetary excess. Far more money will remain
available to chase and bid up prices on relatively-much-less goods,
services, and commodities including gold itself!
Gold
successfully weathering this week’s uber-hawkish FOMC meeting
showing a major rate-hike cycle looming dead-ahead off the bow is
momentous. Gold-futures speculators finally seem to fully expect
and accept big Fed tightening coming in 2022 and 2023. Thus
they should be less excitable on Fed-hawkish news and economic data
going forward. So the secular gold bull their selling delayed
should be resuming.
Fundamentally-superior mid-tier and junior gold stocks remain the
biggest beneficiaries of much-higher gold prices ahead. They
rallied sharply with gold into mid-November, but were dragged back
down to their stop losses on this latest bout of heavy gold-futures
selling. Our stoppings averaged out to neutral, fully recovering
our capital. So we’ve been aggressively redeploying buying back
in low in our weekly newsletter.
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The
bottom line is gold weathered this week’s uber-hawkish FOMC meeting
with flying colors. Not only did the Fed double its QE4-tapering
pace, but top Fed officials dramatically pulled forward and
intensified their rate-hike outlook. A major new hiking cycle now
looms dead-ahead, likely to start within months. Yet instead of
wilting on this hawkish revelation, gold-futures speculators finally
accepted it and resumed buying.
QE
tapering isn’t bearish for gold, as it leaves in place the many
trillions of dollars of QE money printed. Those directly drive
price inflation, competing for far-slower-growing goods and services
and bidding up their prices. Gold has also rallied strongly on
average through the past dozen Fed-rate-hike cycles since 1971.
This next one shouldn’t prove any different, especially in such a
super-bullish environment for gold. |