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Written by Trotsky, edited by Mish. see
addendum.
Few markets are as widely misunderstood and subject to so many misconceptions
as gold. Many of those misconceptions stem from gold's dual role as a
commodity and money. This post will attempt to clear up some of those misconception with a few facts. Let's start with one
key fact.
Gold is Money
How can I actually claim that 'gold is money'? After all, it is not used as
official money anywhere and barring isolated instances of payments made from
a digital gold account, it is unlikely that one will ever make a payment in
gold these days.
In addition, central banks seem intent on 'demonetizing' gold, as the biggest
CB holders of gold (except the US) continue to unload it, ostensibly to earn
the higher returns provided by bonds. Selling gold for returns is actually a
spurious argument, because reserves are just that: reserves. And the primary
purpose of reserves is not to produce a return.
In spite of all this, we still know that gold is money, because it trades in
the market as if it were money. Let's see if we can prove that thesis.
Gold Supply and Demand
If gold's price were determined by fabrication demand alone (jewelry and industrial uses), it could not possibly trade
at a price of $650 oz.
Many gold analysts, from the mainstream to fringe groups such as the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA)
claim that they can predict what the gold price will do by adding up annual fabrication
and investment demand (as well as dehedging demand
by miners) and contrasting the resulting total with annual supply (mine
supply, central bank selling, disinvestment and scrap). In short, they
analyze the gold market in the same manner as they would analyze the copper
market.
It should be immediately obvious that this can't be correct. After all,
nearly the entire gold ever mined (approximately 150,000-160,000 tons) is
still here. In short, the total potential supply of gold is some 97-98% greater
than the gold produced every year (approximately 2,600 tons).
On that basis it makes no sense to apply traditional commodity supply/demand
analysis based on annualized trends in the gold market.
Simply put, there is a big difference between commodities that are
effectively used up (aside from scrap residual returning to the market every
year) and a commodity the indestructibility and durability of which inter alia
made gold the 'money commodity' in the first place.
Jewelry Demand vs. Monetary Demand
One can further illustrate gold's unique nature as money with a study of gold
prices vs. jewelry demand. If record fabrication
demand for gold (jewelry) must be good for the price
of gold, then a historic high in jewelry demand
should in theory coincide with a high gold price.
However, record high jewelry demand in 1999 - 2000 in actual fact
coincided with a 20 year bear market low in the gold price - the exact
opposite of what traditional commodity supply/demand analysis would suggest.
We can therefore conclude that there must be a source of gold demand that is
of far greater importance than the jewelry and
industrial demand components, and that demand constitutes the true driver of
the price of gold in terms of fiat money.
Indeed, there is. This demand component is called 'monetary demand'. Monetary
demand and the supply of gold is actually best described as the 'degree of
reluctance of the current owners of gold to part with their gold at current
prices' since, as mentioned above, some 160,000 tons are owned by somebody
already.
De facto gold acts in the markets as if it were another currency rather than
a commodity. It often keys off other currency cross rates, such as dollar/euro , and has a strong tendency to ignore all the typical
supply/demand analysis thrown at it by the mainstream (including the World Gold Council which should
know better).
A rising gold price usually begets falling jewelry
demand, which is exactly what the theory of price elasticity
would suggest. But at the same time, rising prices actually tend to stoke
investment demand, just as a developing uptrend in the stock market tends to
invite more demand rather than less as this chart, courtesy of Sharelynx Gold
shows.

The above chart shows that the record high in jewelry
demand coincided with the 20-year bear market low in the gold price. So what
was driving the price of gold higher? We know it was monetary demand driving
the price because the total fabrication demand for gold has been basically
flat since 1999.
Ironically enough, the chart also shows the price of gold was falling for
over 20 years even as fabrication demand was rising. This is further proof
that fabrication demand is not the most important driver of the price of
gold. Finally, it should also be noted that some jewelry
demand, especially in India, is in reality monetary demand in disguise.
The sin of attaching importance to jewellery demand in gold price forecasts
is engaged in by all the major brokerage houses. This leads even the best of
money managers to making mistakes, as evidenced below:
Legendary value investor Jean-Marie Eveillard
recently stated the following in a Fortune interview:
"When we started our gold fund in 1993 - which proved to be six or seven
years too soon - I mistakenly thought that my downside was protected by the
fact that jewelry demand was fairly vibrant. But I
was wrong. I think gold moves up and down based on investment demand
mostly."
The WGC (World Gold Council) meanwhile tries to gauge 'implied investment
demand' respectively 'dehoarding' retroactively, by
adding up known new annual supply (from mining, scrap, central bank selling
and hedging) and contrasting it with known annual fabrication demand. The
difference, it reckons, must represent 'implied investment demand'
(presumably the demand from gold ETF’s figures in these calculations as
well these days).
However, as we noted, investment demand is also expressing itself by the
reluctance of current gold holders to sell at a given price. This reluctance
can not be measured, and actual investment demand is therefore also not
measurable.
Gold Mine Production vs. Total Demand

The above chart depicts another peculiarity of the gold market’s
supply/demand situation: As the price of gold rises, mine production actually
flattens out and falls. There are two reasons for this unusual response to
higher prices.
·
During low gold price environments, mines are forced
to ‘high grade’ (i.e., mine higher grade portions of their orebodies). Once the price rises, they shift their mining
activities to lower grade portions of their orebodies,
that haven’t been economic to mine previously.
·
During periods of low gold prices, exploration
spending falls, so that once prices rise, very few new mines are set to open
and take up the slack from depleted mines. It can take up to 7 - 10 years
from the discovery of an economic orebody to the
point when mining can begin.
·
What motivates monetary demand for gold?
To answer this question one must look back at how gold evolved to become
money in the first place. First of all, it always was a commodity with a
demand based on its usefulness for creating ornamentation and jewelry, so there was a prior demand for gold that made
it useful in barter.
In addition to that, its non-corrosiveness, divisibility, fungibility
and easy portability weighed in its favor for use
as money. Lastly, its scarcity and the fact that its supply is unlikely to
suffer sudden increases, regardless of the wishes of the money issuing
authorities, made it a prime candidate to act as a store of value.
There is a single historical exception to this gold supply dogma, and that's
when Spain imported (stole) gold from the New World in the 17th century
leading to inflation in Europe. Nowadays, mine supply is around 2% of the
total stock of gold per annum and it's highly unlikely there will be much
deviation from this percentage. Thus a similar gold-based inflation today
would be extremely unlikely.
This latter point - that the State can't create gold out of thin air - is
what lies at the heart of the monetary demand for gold.
In our modern day fiat money system with its fractional reserves banking
systems and free-floating paper currencies, gold is the only form of money
safe from the depredations of central bankers. It therefore serves in the
widest sense as a barometer of confidence in this central bank administered
system.
Considering that the US dollar has lost about 97% of its value against gold
since the Federal Reserve has been in business, one can conclude that
confidence in fiat money has been waning rather precipitously over time. This
trend is certain to remain a one-way street over the long term, with
occasional fluctuations as confidence in paper (or digital) money waxes and
wanes.
Unfortunately, this sad state of affairs doesn't seem to worry the engineers
of inflation. They only get worried when it happens too quickly (so fast that
everybody takes notice). One should add here that in the back of the mind of
the typical monetary bureaucrat there is this little voice that says:
"If push comes to shove, we can always take it back by force."
After all, it wouldn't be the first time.
Time Preferences
In the shorter term, the motives of gold holders who to refuse to sell
(possibly even adding to their position) often depend on immediate concerns
such as real interest rates, inflation expectations, the spread between short
and long term interest rates as a proxy for the likely bias of monetary
policy, and the exchange value of the US dollar.
Typically gold is a counter-cyclical asset that does best in real terms when
liquidity evaporates. At times however, there can be pro-cyclical demand when
equity, commodity, and gold prices are all rising strongly, and liquidity is
more than abundant.
In the end, such price fluctuations in gold are a bit like Warren Buffet's
famous remark about the stock market being a 'voting machine in the short
term and a weighing machine in the long term'. In the short term, all sorts
of considerations can be used to 'explain' movements in the gold price, but
in the long term, gold acts as the aforementioned barometer of confidence in
central bank issued fiat money.
Up next: Why does fiat money seemingly "work" at all?
[The above link added after the fact for reference purposes.]
Addendum:
Mish asked me if I would consider writing a series
of posts on his blog about gold. I was pleased to take advantage of his
offer. Together we came up with the topics, I did the writing, and Mish did the editing. A question came up as to what name
to make these posts under. The name “Trotsky” had its origins as
a joke handle I started using a long ways back on Kitco.
I'm as anti-Leon Trotsky as one can possibly be. I'm not particularly fond of
the handle anymore, but it's now the name I am associated with and we decided
not to change it on short notice.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis
Thoughts on the great inflation/deflation/stagflation
debate as well as discussions on gold, silver, currencies, interest rates,
and policy decisions that affect the global markets.
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