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Posts Tagged ‘interest rates’

5
Mar

GOLD’S VIRTUOUS CYCLE – ANOTHER DECADE TO COME?

   Posted by: Mr. Gold    in Uncategorized

If there is one lesson I derive from history, it is that things that have never happened before do occur.  Extrapolation or intrapolation from past trends has led many an investor onto the manure heap of wasted capital.  Looking back at the last decade, there are at least several themes which seem to be enjoying a “stronger for longer” mantra: the emerging market growth, the commodity boom and the (ever more enigmatic) gold story.  But while the emerging markets have seen tangible wealth generation, sound macroeconomic stewardship and a productive combination of savings and investment (pulling, not surprisingly the commodity trade along), the gold fundamentals are poorly understood in this context.  Little attention has been paid to the mechanism of the progressive wealth shift which has underpinned the gold demand through reinforcing feedback loops, with several positive effects on the way.

Let us start with the US market and the introduction of the Greenspan put, recognized sometime after his seminal 1996 speech.  With the exception of 2004, when interest rates were hiked some time after the long-term yield rose (and gold still returned a creditable 6%) the US economy enjoyed a prolonged low-interest rate environment.  This famously fed into the construction boom and supported non-yielding assets, not least gold, whose lease rate (below Libor) is negatively correlated to prices.  But this low interest rate environment also unleashed a hunt for yield.  The emerging markets were among the beneficiaries of those flows, barely 3-4 years after the most recent (“Asian”) crisis.  This time however, the flows were not dominated purely by US-dollar denominated credit, and included capital from equity funds.  Importantly, the growth in wealth affected several economies whose consumers had historically been “positively inclined” towards ownership of gold.  For all the near-universal ubiquity of gold as ornament and as a store of value, the enrichment of Middle Eastern, South Asian and East Asian consumer/investor has had a stronger impact on gold sales than wealth preservation of baby boomers.

Yet much of the capital inflows also triggered a defensive posture by the monetary authorities in the emerging markets, many of which remembered all too painfully the lessons of the Asian crisis.  Beijing consensus began to emerge, with the religion of an open capital account more commonly questioned.  This created a strong upward pressure on the currencies of the economies running a current account surplus over and above the capital inflows.  In extreme cases, sterilization was required to reduce the domestic component of the monetary base.  Elsewhere, the liquidity conditions allowed for a construction boom which appeared commodity-friendly.  Although gold did not participate in this process directly (as metallurgical coal, iron ore and copper did), it has benefited from it indirectly, via commodity indices, where the yellow metal was bought along with the energy and industrial metals.

But the net capital inflow into current account-surplus countries has also led to a massive accumulation of foreign reserves.  Over a decade, the foreign reserves increased from 1.9 trillion dollars to 6.8 trillion dollars, dominated by growth in four Asian countries: China, Japan, India and Taiwan.  Given that the current account surpluses were generated by trade surpluses (with the exception of Japan, where the surplus was more related to income from overseas investments), it is not surprising that most of the inflows were in US dollars.  Understandably, they were also deployed in US dollar vehicles – Treasuries, agency debt and corporate debt.  But this accumulation did generate expectations that after a decade of post-Cold War net selling by (Western) central banks, globally the monetary authorities would now move into a net neutral, or even net positive purchase mode.  Although it is not in the interest of dollar holders to make dollar-bearish statements, there are indications that central banks have indeed shifted away from a strongly negative attitude to gold.

The other gold-friendly element, which has long been occulted by the foreign reserve accumulation, relates to the role of the Euro.  The foreign reserve growth has seen the progressive erosion of the role of the dollar as a reserve currency, though not yet as a currency denominating the global trade (occasional renminbi swaps notwithstanding).  In the effect, some of the accumulated dollar positions have been exchanged into the Euro – whose global role increased significantly over the last decade.  For most of the decade, gold traded with a positive correlation to Euro / dollar pair, a phenomenon disrupted in the first quarter of 2009 and again most recently.  But for the most part, inflows into the Euro were viewed as “bullish gold”.

However strong, the demand for Euro from the monetary authorities has been dwarfed by the overseas demand for US Treasuries, 33% of which are held outside of the United States.  This, seemingly perennial demand has helped the US authorities to keep yields low, fuelling the credit boom until 2007.  But as already noted before, low (real) interest rates are gold’s most trusted friend.

As we can see, this large loop of global capital flows has benefited gold at several junctures – through the interest rates, capital inflows into gold-consuming nations, the commodity boom and resulting index investments, the growth of forex reserves with the potential increase of the role of gold as a reserve asset, and finally through the increased role of the Euro – which has been mostly positively correlated to gold prices.  Which of these factors are here to stay and which are to go away?

The emerging market side of the equation may last longer – despite the current fears surrounding inflationary pressures and higher interest rates (indeed, the related capital outflows could first affect Latin America, rather than Asia).  The Euro story will depend on whether the multiple public deficits are treated via strict – and ultimately deflationary – austerity measures (a near-term negative for gold) or through monetization.  And the US interest rates?  Here’s a tough one.  According to Bernanke, they are low for a “foreseeable future”, and indeed, as long as they trail inflation, gold will benefit.  But does “future” mean 2011?  This is when Bush’s tax cuts (1.6% of GDP) will expire.  The US economy is too brittle to survive an interest rate hike and a tax raise.  Are Washington politicians are as suicidal as Ryutaro Hashimoto was in 1997?  Although it is highly unlikely that Republicans ever vote a tax increase, expiration of old tax cuts is a different story.  Deficit bashers are aplenty today, jockeying now for November elections.  But a tighter monetary policy, coupled with fiscal fundamentalism will smother the US economy and its exports, which will struggle under a stronger dollar.

Would this happen early this decade, gold will suffer, offering spectacular new entry points.  Why?  Because this exercise in macro-economic amnesia will not last.  Nor did Hashimoto.

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19
Jan

SPOT GOLD IN 2010 – WHAT SIGNALS TO WATCH OUT FOR?

   Posted by: Mr. Gold    in Uncategorized

With the GFMS figures out now, it has been confirmed what we suspected since October – global investment demand for gold outstripped jewelry demand for the first time in three decades. The traditional relationship between the price driver – the Comex trading, and price floor (determined by the physical demand) has been transformed by the success of the ETFs and increased interest in other gold investment products. In the first quarter of 2009, gold price advanced in synch with the strengthening dollar as record volumes of gold had to be stored to respond to the 13moz worth of new ETF demand. Then, in September, the gold option volatility skew suddenly flattened, the market went short gamma and – most unusually – never corrected after record increase in net long Comex positions. The goal posts of this market had shifted.


Investment demand is a game changer. Just witness the spectacular success of the new platinum ETFs in the United States since the beginning of 2010. In just two weeks, the market added the equivalent of 30% of last year’s global ETF demand… The picture for palladium is even more dramatic. There is little doubt that the autocatalyst and jewelry demand will have to respond to new price range and the PGM market may be testing how far the spread tolerance can go between the various market participants.


Platinum has a track record of taking some shine off gold. The market is about a tenth of the size of the gold market and the white metal lives a constructively schizophrenic life as an industrial and investment product at the same time. Although precious metals also tend to affect each other’s fortunes, an argument could be constructed on the basis of anecdotal evidence that the PGM ETF rush has led to some ‘gold fatigue’ among investors wobbling unsteadily into 2010.

But the clues to gold’s fortunes in 2010 have to be sought elsewhere. Yes, ultimately, gold market specific expectations will play the determining role – expectations surrounding central banks’ intentions, further growth of investment demand, recovery (or not) of Indian jewelry demand and the liquidity of the secondary market. Yet, I would argue that some of the main drivers of the gold market will come from the outside – determined by the broader risk perceptions, the shifts in the currency market, the anticipation surrounding relative interest rates and the bond market performance. Here is a short list of signals which may have consequences for the gold market.

1. Pay a close attention to the decisions surrounding the phase out of qualitative easing in the US. Although Bank of England has already begun to sell corporate bonds, the exact exit by the US monetary authorities remains uncertain. Any indication that the market could benefit from a significant drop in liquidity could be damaging to commodity market and to gold.

2. Watch the spread between US and Japanese 3-month Libor. Although carry trades are notoriously under-reported, there is little doubt that the spell of ultra-weak dollar since last summer correlated with the 3-month Libor falling below the levels of two classic funding currencies – JPY and CHF (Swiss National Bank has since intervened in the markets to weaken the currency). Any indication that the short end interest rates recover in the US could strengthen the dollar. And when it happens – while you may not necessarily be tempted to sell your gold jewelry or knock out your gold teeth just yet – you’d do well buying Japanese stocks.

3. Follow inflation-linked bonds. Any indication that US TIPS offer 2% or higher would mean a global recovery and possibly further inflationary pressures. How gold recovers will depend on market expectations for real rates going forward.

4. Further intervention by emerging markets in foreign exchange markets. Towards the end of 2009, emerging markets spent $150bn strengthening the dollar (and renminbi). Renewed bout of dollar buying would be gold-negative, ceteris paribus.

5. Treasury market balance in government budget deficit countries – not least in the US, UK, Japan and Euroland. The irony of 2010 is that the countries with the highest debt/GDP also enjoy the highest sovereign debt rating. But the demand for $4 trillions of new issuance from the G7 nations will depend on the appetite for other funds, velocity of money and inflation expectations. Any indication that Central Banks are reluctant to foot the bill could lead to rate spikes, affecting real interest rate – to which gold remains eminently sensitive.

These five signals are not mutually exclusive. It is also important to keep in mind that many of the arguments could function counter-intuitively. With 36% of investors based overseas, a US bond sell-off could initially be damaging for the dollar, yet the resulting increase in yields could dampen interest in commodities, including gold. On the other hand, an intervention by ECB to weaken the Euro (now less likely) could initially help the dollar, but the long-term effects would be liquidity-boosting – and therefore positive for risk assets and commodities.

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