Eric Sprott: GOLD ALERT
The latest Markets at a Glance newsletter touches on a few of the topics that Eric and I discussed in depth this morning in his interview with SilverDoctors which will be released this weekend discussing the European debt crisis, Thursday’s gold and silver raid, and tightness in the physical precious metals markets.
GOLD ALERT
By Eric Sprott and Shree Kargutkar
There have been key developments in the physical gold market over the last few weeks which we feel are worth highlighting:
1) The Chinese gold imports from Hong Kong in April, 2012
surged almost 1300% on a YoY basis. Total gross imports for the month of
April were 103.6 tonnes and the net imports were 66.3 tonnes1.
It is not the data for April alone which has caught our eye. There has
been a stunning increase of gold imports through Hong Kong for export
into China over the past 2 years. Between May 2010 and April 2011, China
imported a net 66 tonnes of physical gold through Hong Kong. Between
May 2011 and April 2012, that number jumped to 489 tonnes. This
represents an increase of 640%.
Source: Census and Statistics Department of Hong Kong
2) Central banks from around the world bought over 70
tonnes of gold in April, 2012. Data from the IMF showed developing
countries such as the Philippines, Turkey, Mexico and Sri Lanka were
significant buyers of gold as prices dipped2.
3) Iran purchased $1.2B worth of gold in April, 2012
through Turkey. As the developed nations continue devaluing their
currency at the expense of developing nations, countries such as Iran,
China and Mexico are forced to look at alternative stores of value3.
4) After twenty years of lackluster returns and stagnant
bond yields, Japanese pension funds have finally discovered the value of
investing in gold. The $500M Okayama Metal and Machinery pension fund
placed 1.5% of its assets into gold bullion-backed ETFs in April in
order to “escape sovereign risk”4.
5) Bill Gross writes5, “Soaring debt/GDP ratios
in previously sacrosanct AAA countries have made low cost funding
increasingly a function of central banks as opposed to private market
investors. Both the lower quality and lower yields of previously
sacrosanct debt therefore represent a potential breaking point in our
now 40-year-old global monetary system. […] As they (investors) question
the value of much of the $200 trillion which comprises our current
system, they move marginally elsewhere – to real assets such as land,
gold and tangible things, or to cash and a figurative mattress where at
least their money is readily accessible”. Is the bond king recommending
gold? YES, YES YES!
6) The Gold Mining ETF, GDX, has seen strong inflows in the
past 3 months. The number of units outstanding have increased from
162.5M6 to roughly 187M7 between March 1, 2012 and
May 31, 2012. This represents an increase in assets of almost $1.2B in a
span of 3 months. It is worth pointing out that for a majority of this
three months period, GDX, and by extension the gold mining companies
were experiencing significant declines in their market values.
We believe there has been a material change in the gold
investing landscape. The HUI, which is the Gold Bugs Index, is now up
over 20% from its lows since May 16th, 2012. The slide in gold equities
seems to be subsiding as a foundation for a strong move upwards is set.
New buyers, represented by the Chinese, central banks, Japanese pension
funds and the Iranians, bought almost 140 tonnes of gold in April alone.
To put this into perspective, the annual gold production is
approximately 2600 tonnes8. China and Russia produce around
500 tonnes of gold annually, which never makes it to the open market.
This leaves about 2100 tonnes of gold production annually for the rest
of the world.
When buyers representing 140 tonnes of new demand enter a
market which only has 175 tonnes of monthly supply, we are left
wondering about two things:
1) In a balanced market, where is the source of supply to the new buyers going to come from?
2) How can a new buyer of size get into the gold market,
which is already balanced, without significantly impacting the price of
gold?
The answer is fairly obvious. When demand outstrips supply,
prices move higher. These significant macro changes in the supplydemand
dynamic of the gold market should propel the price of gold to new
highs.
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