Gold Forecaster
- Global Watch
The Evolution of Gold or
why gold is moving up
Julian D.W.
Phillips
Gold Forecaster snippet
Apr 16, 2007
- Below is a snippet from the
latest weekly issue from www.GoldForecaster.com
This piece is written on the
base provided by GFMS, as always, a most competent gold
survey of what happened in the gold market last year.
Their conclusions highlight the evolution of the gold market
over the last 7 years, since the Washington Agreement was signed
in 1999.
At that time in an environment
of a gold market clouded by the constant threat of Central Bank
sales, the treatment of the metal as a commodity and the accelerated
gold production fuelled by the hedging of future production at
prices persistently higher than those achieved when a new mine
came into production.
The path of gold since then
has been remarkably slow. At first a key change was the announcing
of Central Bank sales of gold ahead of the event, which limited
sales to 'ceilings'. This removed the fear of unexpected sales.
Then the gold price was at
the mercy of hedge and speculative fund dominance making the
gold price rise then fall 30% each way.
Jewelry demand, along with
other uses for gold grew steadily, while absorbing price rises
until it became apparent that the gold price was going far higher,
then demand stabilized from this source. This was most noticeable
in the West, in particular and in times of volatility in India.
Jewelry decline
But as gold prices
rose it moved out of the reach of the small consumer, through
the buying of lower caratage gold, so reducing tonnage demand.
After all, they wanted something they could afford and looked
like gold, so price was very important to them. Jewelry making
is a key source of demand for gold even now. Offtake in the
sector fell sharply in 2006 by 428 tonnes to 2,280 tonnes, marking
a 15-year low. Gold imports into the Middle East, which were
cut by half last year, could be reduced again this year if price
volatility remains in place. Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Egypt
accounted for 80% of the decline in imports, which were affected
by increased scrap supplies and less jewelry production. Scrap
jewelry volumes leapt 34% or 112 tonnes. The outlook for this
year is not much brighter if prices continue to rise, which would
mean jewelry demand could contract even further, but the pull
back is unlikely to be as steep as in 2006. The lost jewelry
demand has to be replaced with investment demand or prices will
fall to a level where jewelry demand returns.
But in the Indian sub continent
gold demand grew as it held true to it's promise of financial
security and reliability in a country where the 'alternative
gold world' provided a money out of the sight of a corrupt officialdom,
satisfying privacy requirements as well as fulfilling their religious
and social requirements.
The shift to Investment
But as the gold price
rose, there had to be a falling away of the price conscious buyer,
eventually bringing in the wealthy individual and institutions
who looked to gold for long-term investment. 2005 & 6 in
particular saw a gear-shift in the attitude to gold as an investment
rather than as a commodity or even simply jewelry. But investment
dropped in 2006 compared to the previous year, as the market
adjusted to a more active buy and sell activity, rather than
just buying. Implied net investment fell 20% in 2006 to just
under 400 tonnes. But GFMS stated, "Continued weakness
in the U.S.$, ongoing geopolitical tensions and strong commodity
prices, coupled with fundamental support appearing on price dips,
continue to make the investment case for gold strong".
We agree completely, but would like to add that it will be increasingly
be on the back of falling global confidence in paper money and
uncertainty over the stability and prospects for the global economy.
Central Bank's changing
attitudes
It also coincided with
a change in attitude of the Central Banks towards gold, fully
aware of the dangers facing the $ as well as other paper currencies.
We saw the transition from the gold overhang of 1999 to some
Central Banks buying the metal, wanting to lower their exposure
to the $. But the most important move by the Central Banks
like Germany and Italy was the refusal to sell their gold, saying
that gold was a "useful counter to the $". This stated
its monetary value as an integral art of their reserves. Central
bank gold sales slowed sharply in 2006, declining 51% to 328
tonnes as signatories to the Central Bank Gold Agreement (CBGA)
recorded lower sales and some other banks starting to buy gold.
On the one hand, Agreement
signatories seems set to continue to sell below their annual
quota, and on the other, the appetite for certain central banks
to diversify away from U.S. $ and into gold is likely to generate
further purchases, although the volumes of the latter are expected
to be constrained, at least for the short to medium term. There
is even a possibility that the announced gold sales of the Central
Bank Gold Agreement will be virtually exhausted by the 26th of
September, the end of the C.B.G.A. year.
Central Banks are faced with
a gold market in which a Central Bank finds it difficult to buy
gold in volume, without setting the gold price shooting up, and
the need for them to propagate their own national currencies,
but unhappy with holding huge amounts of those currencies, now
set to fall in value.
The effect of higher
prices
The gold market will
continue to evolve, we believe, into an investment market for
Central Banks, institutions and wealthy individuals with gold
prices rising to a level that makes gold most gold jewelry just
too expensive. Indeed we expect the commodity side of gold
to diminish, where replacement metals are an alternative. At
some point in the future we would expect, because gold prices
will be high enough, for institutional demand to provide sufficient
liquidity for major Central Bank transactions as in the past.
Sound too rich? Just take a look at the weekly of the E.C.B.
for the week before last, in which the sales of gold from their
members was, yet again, overshadowed by the quarterly revaluation
of their reserves. The revaluation of total gold reserves,
after the sales of the week, was the equivalent of buying nearly
250 tonnes of gold. However, this point seems to be lost
on those still fearful of more Central Bank sales and on those
Central Banks still selling gold.
Is it any wonder that wealthy
individuals and institutions want to follow Germany and Italy
holding gold?
De-hedging confirms
rising prices
The very act of de-hedging
is a statement by gold producers that they believe in a rising
gold price and don't want to lose profits by selling their gold
ahead of production. So last year continued the strong trend
of producer de-hedging, buying back 373 tonnes last year. The
de-hedging will continue in 2007, with a total of between 210
tonnes and 300 tonnes for the full year.
The total outstanding forward
sales, loans and the delta hedge against option positions stood
at 1,364 tonnes at the end of 2006 giving producers an ongoing
nightmare. Every time a producer reports that he sold for between
$350 and $430, when he could have got $675 if he had waited,
he does so with head hung low. Isn't it better to take that
lost opportunity by buying back the hedge now and get the continuing
price rises from now on, rather than watch the position steadily
worsen?
Mining production
to rise
On the supply side,
the picture looks brighter for 2007 after global mine output
fell by 79 tonnes last year to a 10-year low, led by Asia, Africa
and North America. Cash costs rose by $45/oz, double the increase
in 2005. New mines, ramp ups and less of a swing at some of
the world's larger operations that dampened the impact of new
production in 2006 should support production level to above 2,500
tonnes. But don't expect that to rise to the point where the
present levels of demand will be satisfied.
Please subscribe to www.GoldForecaster.com
for the entire report.
Apr 13, 2007
-Julian
D.W. Phillips
email: gold-authenticmoney@iafrica.com
321gold Ltd
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