Gold is no longer the most valuable precious metal! Palladium dethroned it! We invite you, thus, to read our today’s article about that metal and find out what is the fundamental outlook for the palladium market.
We have a new record! Please take a look at the chart below, which displays the palladium prices since the beginning of the year. As one can see, the price of palladium soared in the first two months more than 20 percent, jumping above $1,500!
Chart 1: Palladium prices from January 2 to March 1, 2019.
It
means that palladium is at an all-time new record high, as the next
chart clearly shows. Take a good look. If you do not believe, visit
kitco.com. But the figure does not lie – the palladium is really more
expensive than gold or platinum right now!
Chart 2: Palladium prices from April 1990 to March 1, 2019.
Who would have thought that palladium would shine so bright? Hm… in fact, we thought so! In July 2017 edition of the Market Overview, we wrote the following:
(…) the price of palladium should be supported in the near future.
We know that the above-ground stocks of palladium are relatively
plentiful (and may be greater than the market expects), but market
deficits at such heights cannot last indefinitely – and when the market
eventually tightens, prices will need to rise.
And this is precisely what happened. At the end of 2018, the period of extreme market tightness occurred, despite substantial liquidation of stocks. According to the latest Johnson Matthey’s Platinum Group Metals Market Report, the underlying structural deficit grew last year and, what is more important, is expected to widen in 2019, which will not be without significance for the price of palladium.
Why
is that? The main reason is strong growth in autocatalyst demand due to
the tighter emission legislation and stricter vehicle testing regimes.
But if the autocatalyst demand is so strong, why platinum – which is also used mainly in the automotive industry – is so sluggish compared to palladium? This is because the
latter is used in gasoline vehicles (and in hybrid electric vehicles,
which tend to be partly gasoline-powered), while platinum is applied in
diesel cars, which are out of favor after the Volskwagen scandal. We pointed out this key factor for the precious metals as early as in July 2017:
Given
the retreat of diesel technology in the automotive sector, palladium
should outperform platinum in the long-run. Surely diesel will not
disappear, but its dusk is very likely after the Volkswagen scandal (…)
Therefore, taking all this into consideration, the investment potential
of palladium seems to be greater than in case of platinum.
However,
one of our Readers turned our attention to another important factor
which could significantly affect the precious metals market. Have you
heard about Zimbabwe? In the 2000s, the government started to
expropriate white farmers as an effort to more equitably distribute land
between black and white people. The effects were disastrous, as the
agricultural production declined sharply, and the hyperinflation set in. After farmland, the time has come for the mines – in 2008, Mugabe signed into law a bill giving local owners the right to take majority control of foreign mines.
OK, but what does Zimbabwe have to do with platinum and palladium? Well, nothing. But South Africa has, as the country mines about 70 percent of global platinum and about 38 percent of world palladium.
And we see disturbing signals that the country is following the
Zimbabwean route. In February 2018, Cyril Ramaphosa, who become the new
president, has prioritized land redistribution. In December 2018, South
Africa’s National Assembly established a committee to introduce a new
bill on land reform, making way for land expropriation without compensation for the previous owners.
The land seizures are to repair “the original sin committed against
Black South Africans during colonization and apartheid”. Now, investors
are afraid of the nationalization of the mines, as the Economic Freedom
Fighters, a new left wing party, and even some members of the ruling
African National Congress call not only for farmland but also for mines
and banks to be state-owned.
Of course, South Africa is not Zimbabwe. But, Brexit
or Trump as POTUS were once also considered unlikely. Hence, we should
not exclude the scenario of expropriation of mines (or the scenario of
disruptions in the production at least). If it materializes, platinum would benefit from it the most, as the country is the dominant producer of this metal. However, palladium will also benefit, as the production would probably drop (in the medium-term). And given that the latter metal has better fundamentals (platinum market is in structural surplus, while palladium market is in deficit), it still seems to be a better investment choice.
Although it is true that the automotive demand for platinum should
stabilize in the near future, and the rising price discrepancy should
make platinum more attractive as catalyst, the autocatalyst producers
say that they are not seeing broad-based substitution from palladium to
platinum. Hence, the outlook for platinum improved, but the path for the palladium is still better.
If you enjoyed the above analysis and would you like to know more about the fundamental outlook for the precious metals, we invite you to read the March Market Overview report. If you’re interested in the detailed price analysis and price projections with targets, we invite you to sign up for our Gold & Silver Trading Alerts. If you’re not ready to subscribe yet and are not on our gold mailing list yet, we urge you to sign up. It’s free and if you don’t like it, you can easily unsubscribe. Sign up today!
Thank you.
Arkadiusz Sieron, Ph.D.
Sunshine Profits‘ Gold News Monitor and Market Overview Editor