Posts Tagged ‘precious metals’
Platinum ‘Supply Squeeze’ Likely To Lead to Record Prices

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,378.50, EUR 1,030.35 and GBP 880.32 per ounce. 
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,386. (Read more…)00, EUR 1,038.59 and GBP 881.79 per ounce.

Gold was little changed on Tuesday as investors awaited guidance from a Federal Reserve meeting on the outlook for the bank’s still incredibly ultra loose stimulus programme, amid mixed U.S. economic data.

Click Here To Dowload Comprehensive Guide to Investing in Gold

Uncertainty about the tenure of Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke and the possibility of his early retirement may lead to increased risk aversion which will support gold.

Platinum’s fundamentals look increasingly strong and platinum is an attractive diversification for bullion owners looking to further diversify the precious metals component of their investment and savings portfolio.

A record deficit in platinum supplies is set to push prices higher, as unrest sweeps the South African mining industry and demand is boosted by the auto sector and a new exchange traded fund (ETF), according to HSBC, as covered on CNBC (see Commentary).

Platinum in USD – 10 Year

Platinum, which has been influenced by swings in the price of gold since April this year, hit a six-week high of $1,531 earlier this month following the “highly successful” launch of a new physically backed ETF. According to respected James Steel, chief precious metals analyst at HSBC, prices will rise further over the next two years, as the risk of South African mining strikes weigh on output.

But Steel also cut his price target on the metal in the short term because platinum had been influenced more than he had anticipated by the sharp swings in the price of gold.

Platinum Holdings All Known ETFs 

Platinum prices have fallen around 17% from the highs in February, as investors sold their gold positions. While both commodities are considered precious metals, platinum has far greater industrial uses.

“A rotational shift out of commodities and into equities also took its toll on the platinum market,” Steel said.

He predicts the metal will peak at $1,875 by 2015 or a 30% return in 3 years, before falling back to a more steady level of $1,825 thereafter.

“The launch of the South African ETF in mid-May has already attracted a whopping 371,000oz of platinum demand to date. This is more double the growth in the rest of the platinum ETFs combined this year,” he added.

Jewelry demand remains strong, and if industrial or auto demand pushes above forecasts, Steel said platinum prices would rise. At the same time, limited output is likely as further strike action in South Africa, the hub for global platinum production, could hit supplies.

Platinum Supply Mine Production South Africa 

“Widespread strike action and other stoppages in South Africa greatly reduced domestic platinum production in 2012. According to Johnson Matthey, production fell almost 16 percent in 2012,” said Steel.

“The possibility exists for further disruptions to production in South Africa. Additionally, the long-term challenges of low platinum prices make a sizable amount of current production uneconomical. This leads us to believe that higher prices are necessary to sustain production longer term.”

GoldCore believe that the supply demand fundamentals are very strong and should lead to new record nominal prices above $2,000/oz in the coming years.

Steel’s new average price forecasts for 2013 is $1,580 down from $1,710 forecast previously and for 2014 it’s $1,725 down from $1,800 previously.

Based on platinum’s price of $1431/oz today, that’s a forecasted 9% gain this year with zero default risk and a guarantee of return of capital as platinum bullion cannot be ‘bailed-in’ or become worthless like stocks and bonds.

NEWS

Gold holds steady ahead of Fed meeting - Reuters

Gold Holds Losses Before Fed Meeting as Investors Weigh Stimulus - Bloomberg

Obama Says Bernanke Has Stayed ‘Longer Than He Wanted’ - Bloomberg

HuaAn expects Chinese gold ETF to raise up to $489 Million - Reuters

UK’s Co-op Bank agrees to £1.5 billion ‘bail-in’ rescue plan - Reuters

COMMENTARY

Video: Outlook for Gold – $1,800/oz In Next 12 Months - Bloomerg

Gold’s Neglected Cousin Platinum to Face Supply Squeeze - CNBC

Video: Platinum Outshines Gold Amid Supply Concerns - Bloomberg

Gold Is Poised to Rally Mid-Summer - Huffington Post

    



 
Hard- And Soft-Currency Markets Gone Wild

The FX and precious metals markets are swinging wildly around this morning (amid no news) as US equities remain anchored to hope (and VWAP) ahead of the FOMC tomorrow. Copper is also sliding quickly but WTI is back above $98 as the USD gets back to unchanged on the week. Treasury yields spiked early but have reverted to unchanged now. Credit markets have done nothing but widen (worsen) from the open this morning – also ignoring equity’s stability – but hedgers are active as VIX remains higher on the day.

(Read more…)

 

 

Credit hedgers are out en masse…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

    



 
Guest Post: Gold Is Being Supplied By Western Governments

Submitted by Alasdair Macleod via GoldMoney blog,

There has been considerable throughput of gold in western capital markets, with substantial buying from all round the world following the April price crash. The supply can only have come from two sources: the general public, or one or more governments. It really is that simple. Two months later the gold price has only partially recovered, so physical supplies have continued to be made available. (Read more…) Physical demand cannot have been entirely satisfied by ETF liquidations, confirming governments are involved. This article looks at the dynamics of the gold market around this event and the implications.

While the investing public in the western nations has been generally stunned following the April price smash, demand from Asia is running at record levels, illustrated in the chart below, which is of physical gold deliveries on the Shanghai Gold Exchange. (Thanks due to @KoosJansen for pointing me to the data on the SGE’s Chinese website).

SGE monthly gold deliveries (tonnes)

The increase in deliveries for April and May was spectacular, totalling 460.5 tonnes, with the week ending 26 April alone seeing phenomenal deliveries of 117 tonnes. In addition, according to the Economic Times, India imported 142.5 tonnes in April and 162 tonnes in May, compared with an average monthly rate of 86 tonnes in Q1 2013. Therefore these two countries imported 765 tonnes of gold in two months, before considering any unofficial imports or their government purchases in foreign markets. The rest of Asia, from Turkey to Indonesia would certainly have stepped up their demand for gold as well, as did the western world itself for physical metal as opposed to paper entitlements.

The table below puts this into context.

Chinese & Indian gold demand

A prefatory note about the statistics in this table: there is no single defined source of statistics on gold movements, and there are considerable variations in the same numbers reported by different organisations. The figures in the table above can only illustrate bullion flows. I have sourced the statistics from official sources where possible. The cash-for-gold business has had the easy pickings by now, so an assumption that this is about 600 tonnes per annum is I believe cautiously over-generous. It is based on a speech made by Jeffrey Rhodes of INTL Commodities DMCC to the LBMA in 2010, when he identified scrap supply as 583 tonnes in North America and Europe, whose central banks are in the gold suppression business. At that time, 1,091 tonnes were recycled in the East, including Turkey. Since the Chinese, Russian and other gold-producing governments of Central Asia retain most if not all of their domestically mined gold amounting to over 700 tonnes, there is less than 2,000 tonnes of free mine supply annually available for global markets, based on US Geological Survey figures.

Looking at the bottom line for 2012, there were only 87 tonnes of gold supply for the rest-of-the-world, after Asian and Russian central bank and global ETF purchases. In other words, there must have been a severe deficit overall, which can only have been covered by central bank sales.

About 150 tonnes of ETF gold were liquidated in Q1, providing temporary relief until the Cypriot crisis, when concerns over the security of large deposits in eurozone banks prompted a flight into physical gold, but interestingly, not into ETFs. This was because there were escalating systemic concerns over having physical gold and currency deposits with European banks, while at the same time portfolio investors were worried that the 12-year bull market might have ended.

From the point of view of the western central banks, as well as the bullion banks with short positions on Comex, in March the alarm bells must have been ringing loudly. Chinese demand was accelerating and there was an increasing likelihood that ETF liquidation would cease if the gold price stabilised. If that happened, as the table above clearly shows, an epic bear-squeeze would likely develop, fuelling a rush into gold and potentially bankrupting many of the bullion banks short in the futures markets and/or offering unallocated accounts on a fractional reserve basis.

Therefore, investors had to be dissuaded from buying gold, otherwise the ensuing crisis would not only cause a market failure that could spread to other derivatives (particularly silver), but it would come at the worst possible time, given the coincidental programme of monetary expansion currently being undertaken by all the major central banks.

The reasons for governments to intervene on the side of the bullion banks were therefore compelling. As one would expect, the intervention was well-timed: on Friday 12 April two large sell orders of 100 and 300 tonnes were placed on Comex, clearly designed to do maximum damage to the price, and setting it up for all remaining stops to be taken out the following Monday. Furthermore, central banks were prepared to supply physical gold to keep the price from recovering. We know this because lower prices generated a surge in private demand, not only in China and India, but from everywhere. The only possible supply, other than inadequate ETF liquidation, is from governments.

India and China have absorbed enough gold in the last two months of April and May to leave the rest of the world in a supply deficit, requiring matching sales of western government gold to continue to suppress the price.

The future

We now know for certain that government-controlled gold has been used to defuse a developing crisis in gold markets that had the potential to destabilise bullion banks, other derivative markets and ultimately the whole fiat currency system. We have seen the surge in demand for physical gold, which is the consequence of sharply lower prices. Realistically, the priority has been to ensure such a crisis is avoided, rather than for the price of gold to be continually suppressed.

The difficulty for the casual observer is compounded by the available information being one-sided. We are all painfully aware of both the losses inflicted on investors and their loss of faith in gold at a time when other investment media, such as stocks and bonds, have been doing well. Concealed from us is the real financial condition of the banks and governments themselves, which is the fundamental reason for owning gold. We are acutely aware of the sellers’ pain and only dimly aware of the buyers’ motivation.

Nervous western investors in a market of 160,000 tonnes are in truth a small part of the whole, particularly since gold has been migrating from the west to the east where it has been more valued ever since the 1970s oil crisis. More fundamentally we know that the stock of gold grows at about 1½% annually in line with global population growth. We also know that central banks everywhere are expanding their balance sheets at an accelerating rate. The disparity between the rate of growth for gold and paper currencies will certainly lead to increased tensions between precious metals and currencies generally, and it is this that will drive future demand for gold, not whether or not western investors think it is in a bull or bear market.

A second point about the market being 160,000 tonnes and not just the sum of mine and scrap supply is that the market is far bigger than western governments’ gold reserves. Gold held by them is officially about 19,000 tonnes, but it may well be only half that, or 5% of the aboveground stock, when unrecorded leasing and selling over the last 25 years are taken into account. The ability of central banks to contain a global surge in gold demand such as that which followed the April price-crash and continuing to this day is therefore limited.

But this is only a part of the story. There are the factors concealed from us, such as the buying opportunity given to gold-friendly governments and sovereign wealth funds, both with surplus dollars, as well as the appetite for gold from the growing ranks of the Russian and Asian mega-rich. There are factors known to the financially savvy, such as the growing instability of the Indian rupee and other emerging market currencies, the increasing systemic risks in eurozone banks with the threat posed to deposits, and the revenue shortfalls that force governments to raise money by printing their currencies at an increasing pace: all will impact the gold market in coming months.

These and other systemic problems are deteriorating. A potentially destabilising crisis in the gold market from runaway prices has been defused by allowing the bullion banks the space to square their books. There can be no other realistic objective in supplying government-owned gold into the market. As to the embarrassment of the gold price rising at a time of accelerating money printing – that will have to be accepted, presumably emphasising the official line, that the gold price is irrelevant to a modern economy.