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We have
looked at the motives behind jewelry demand in different parts of the world
and in this second part we now look at Investment demand from different parts
of the world and the motives behind that demand.
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Table 4:
Gold supply and demand (WGC presentation)
|
|
2009
|
2010
|
2011
|
% ch
2011 vs 2010
|
Q1'10
|
Q2'10
|
Q3'10
|
Q4'10
|
Q1'11
|
Q2'11
|
Q3'11
|
Q4'112
|
% ch
Q4'11 vs Q4'10
|
|
Supply
|
|
Mine production
|
2,608
|
2,709
|
2,810
|
4
|
625
|
662
|
717
|
705
|
656
|
701
|
736
|
717
|
2
|
|
Net producer hedging
|
-236
|
-108
|
12
|
|
-19
|
19
|
-54
|
-54
|
10
|
6
|
2
|
-6
|
-
|
|
Total mine supply
|
2,371
|
2,600
|
2,822
|
9
|
606
|
681
|
662
|
651
|
666
|
707
|
737
|
711
|
9
|
|
Official sector sales2
|
34
|
77-
|
440-
|
|
58-
|
14-
|
23-
|
18
|
135-
|
70-
|
142-
|
93-
|
-
|
|
Recycled
gold
|
1,695
|
1,641
|
1,612
|
-2
|
370
|
440
|
377
|
454
|
346
|
411
|
440
|
415
|
-9
|
|
Total Supply
|
4,100
|
4,164
|
3,994
|
-4
|
917
|
1,107
|
1,017
|
1,122
|
877
|
1,048
|
1,036
|
1,033
|
-8
|
|
|
Demand
|
|
Fabrication
|
|
Jewelry
|
1,814
|
2,017
|
1,963
|
-3
|
546
|
418
|
541
|
512
|
567
|
492
|
472
|
432
|
-16
|
|
Technology
|
410
|
466
|
464
|
-1
|
114
|
116
|
120
|
116
|
114
|
117
|
120
|
112
|
-3
|
|
Sub-total
above fabrication
|
2,223
|
2,483
|
2,426
|
-2
|
660
|
534
|
661
|
628
|
682
|
608
|
592
|
544
|
-13
|
|
Total bar & coin demand
|
779
|
1,200
|
1,487
|
24
|
250
|
301
|
310
|
339
|
398
|
331
|
416
|
341
|
1
|
|
ETFs
& similar
|
617
|
368
|
154
|
#
|
5
|
292
|
49
|
22
|
62-
|
52
|
78
|
87
|
290
|
|
Gold Demand
|
3,619
|
4,051
|
4,067
|
0
|
915
|
1,127
|
1,020
|
989
|
1,018
|
991
|
1,086
|
972
|
-2
|
|
"OTC Investment
& stock flows"
|
480
|
113
|
-73
|
|
2
|
-20
|
-3
|
133
|
-140
|
56
|
-50
|
61
|
-54
|
|
London
PM fix (US$/oz)
|
872
|
972.35
|
1225
|
26
|
1100
|
1109
|
1197
|
1227
|
1367
|
1386
|
1506
|
1702
|
39
|
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Copyright
2012 Thomson Reuters GFMS and World Gold Council All rights reserved
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Impact on the Gold Price of different demand types
Investment demand - emerging world
Emerging
world demand for 'jewelry' sits on the border of decoration and investment.
We prefer to look at it as investment demand and to relegate western jewelry
demand to one that is reactive to the state of the developed world's economic
states. Emerging world demand in these nations where economic growth is such
a powerhouse that it is enriching their entire societies. Consequently, the
number of middle class members in those societies has rocketed. Eventually
the middle class of China's population of 1.3 billion people will reach 400
million or so. This equals the population of the U.S. in its entirety. Most
of these believe that gold is an ideal form of saving for a rainy day and buy
to hold for the long term.
With each of
them having a totally different view of the financial system to their
developed world counterparts, this source of long-term demand will prove,
over time, an overwhelming driver of the gold price, almost equal in power to
the central banks demand for gold.
The
difference between the two is that central banks, we believe, will eventually
want to control the gold market and may in select nations feel it imperative
to take their own citizen's gold from them and into the national vaults.
Right now the
Chinese government is encouraging its citizen's to buy gold [while making
exports illegal] for themselves. Its support is also seen in the development
of the Chinese gold distribution networks in that country, through the
banking industry. It can now, freely import, distribute and sell gold to its
people.
China's
appetite for bullion continues to grow. Gold imports by China from Hong Kong
increased to 63 tonnes in March from 40 tonnes in February, according to the Census and
Statistics Department of Hong Kong. Chinese demand is not as price sensitive
as Indian demand [see above] but we summarize the two and emphasize that the
sensitivity is related more to volatility than its price level. If it were so
then the buyer of gold at $300 in 2005 would be saying that at $1,600 it
should no longer be bought. But as a new high is reached and stability
achieved, thereafter, at that new price, back into the market they go,
looking at the price rise since 2005 as a clear demonstration that it has the
ability to keep rising.
Investment demand in the developed world
While the
developed world has a sophisticated set of financial markets the emerging
world has only had that for the last few years. In China they still have a
way to go before they equal the financial skills and infrastructure now seen
in the west. In India the financial system has not been able to achieve the
sophisticated levels of the west. The inherent distrust in government and its
attendant bureaucracy has created a 'cash' society, independent of the
banking system that thrives. Gold is an inherent part of that system. The
trust that we see in the west, in their financial systems, is just not
present in the emerging world. That's one of the prime reasons why gold is so
favored.
That trust in
the financial system is one of the prime reasons that gold is not such
a favored investment in the developed world. It requires no financial skills
to make it earn income or develop a profit-making entity. It is a cold, lifeless,
object outside the reach of the entrepreneur. It is insurance against the
failure of capitalism and its paper money. That's why we have seen a switch
from gold derivative buying to the metal itself.
To emphasize
the point, an investment in a Gold Exchange Traded Fund is an investment in a
quantity of gold held in a bank against which shares are issued. The fact
that it is unallocated gold makes it a profit-seeking investment. As you can
see in the table, investment in gold Exchange Traded Funds fell to 25% of its
2009 level this year. Investment in coins and bar gold has doubled. Holding
allocated gold, or gold coins, or gold bars takes it out of the financial
system and gives it that quality long-term gold investors seek. As doubts
about the banking system and debt linger, this trend may well grow. The above
figures tell us the story.
We expect
this trend to continue and to swell in line with the growing doubts about the
financial system in the years ahead.
Add this to
emerging world and central bank demand and you have the three main price
drivers in the years ahead.
They are
enormous, relative to declining supply factors of re-cycled gold and barely
growing, newly mined gold supply.
Impact of traders on the gold price.
Traders are
solely profit-oriented. Their task is to push movements either way to
maximize profits. It doesn't matter if they are dealing in gold, pork
bellies, soya or silver. What counts is the extent of price movements. They
are made powerful in that they represent moment-to-moment buyers and sellers.
If you counted the number of transactions they make to those of a long-term
investor, the latter become irrelevant to the day-to-day price movements.
Traders call the shots on a daily basis.
But traders
are not crusaders for a cause. They are, at best, fickle and uninterested in
the fundamentals. Fundamentals count to them, simply to describe the tide, in
the picture Technical Analysis paints. If today prompts them to 'short' the
market, they will. And tomorrow the picture tells them to go 'long' of the
market, they will. They are not investors. But they do cloud the picture.
Today, they may react to the European elections and the price of the euro
against the dollar, and this also changes on a day-to-day basis. Tomorrow the
next important piece of news will affect them differently.
But as the
long-term buyers take up all the available gold on the market, the Technical
picture reflects this and will tell traders the way to go.
COMEX
officials tell us that only 5% of its trades lead to the physical delivery of
gold. An example of the impact traders can have, the COMEX recorded an
unusually large transaction of 7,500 gold futures [750,000 ounces or 23.24 tonnes] during one minute of trading at 8:31 a.m., New
York time this last week. The sale took out blocks of bids as large as 84
contracts [8,400 ounces] in one fell swoop and cut prices down to $1,648.80
an ounce [from $1,663.00]. The overall transaction was worth more than $1.24
billion. This smelt like one trader seeing a chance at a quiet time in gold's
day to try to squash the gold price. In the past when the gold price was far
lower, at $300 an ounce, traders drove the gold price up to $390, then down
to $326 afterwards.
Today, this
would be far more difficult due too the increasing
demand from central banks [in particular on a daily basis] and to emerging
world tidal demand narrowing supply and demand, considerably. The present
danger to a trader is that he will be caught 'short' and be forced to pay
more than he sold for as he covers his position. The huge trade recorded on
COMEX appears to have been successful [if it is now closed?], because central
banks will simply wait for the appearance of an offer of physical gold from
the market before buying on the dip. Traders have to reinforce their COMEX
trades by precipitating a fall in the physical market price or they may not
create a fall in the price. If they can't then the price may turn against
them. That's why we saw heavy, sloppy sales at the quiet time of gold's day.
That was the ideal time to impose downward pressures. But the next day we
have seen repeated bounces in the gold prices as the stock sold was bought by
equally large, if not larger investors at a busier time of the day.
If Indian
buyers see the lower price as an opportunity at say $1,600 and Chinese byers
follow through, they too have the ability to squeeze the traders and force
them to cover their 'short' positions and to go 'long'. This will turn the
price back up rapidly. It has the capacity to create an explosive rise in the
gold price.
A look at the
gold price this decade, rising from $275 to a peak over $1,900 shows what is
possible over time. Traders have enjoyed the ups and downs of the gold price
all that time, but never fought the trend. We expect this pattern to continue.
As of now we are reaching a conclusion to the consolidation period that saw
an over $1,900 gold price achieved and a pullback to $1,600 seen thereafter.
As we see in the trends described in the GFMS figure for the last three years
it is clear that there may well be an explosive breakout upwards, should the
gold price retreat below $1,600.
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