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Gold: the disconnect between the price and what is happening in the physical markets
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Gold: the disconnect between the price and what is happening in the physical markets

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Today we turn our attention to the physical gold markets.

There is, as veteran dealer Ross Norman of Metals Daily puts it, a “disconnect between the gold price and what is happening in the physical markets.”

“Our biggest challenge,” says Joshua Saul of the Pure Gold Company, “is finding enough stock on a daily basis to sell. There is a long line of demand, but very little supply. There’s more demand than at the height of Covid.”

These situations don’t occur very often, but they do occur. 

The gold price is falling, but demand for physical gold is high

I remember 2008 like it was yesterday. Gold cratered along with everything else in the second half of that year. It lost around 30% – falling from north of $1,000/oz to $720/oz. The mining companies fell by a lot more.

Yet there was a scramble in the physical gold markets. Bullion dealers had never been so busy. The general public were rushing to get their money “outside the system” into an asset that was nobody else’s liability. 

Gold would later turn up long before most other assets. November was the low, while the S&P500 carried on lower until the following March. But the fact was there was a scramble to buy physical gold even as the price was falling.

It happens. “Coins and bars,” says Norman, “are just a subset of a much bigger industry.” That industry includes the futures markets, exchange traded funds, institutional buying and selling, central bank buying and selling and, of course, jewellery. 

Ordinary investors may look at the state of the world and think, “I need to buy some gold”. They may be doing that at unprecedented levels. But that is not enough to balance out institutional investors who are, says Norman, “selling three to ten tonnes a day.”

As I say, these disconnects do happen, but they don’t necessarily last.

The US dollar has stolen the show

It’s all about the US dollar, as we have been saying on these pages for many months. In the year to date, gold is up around 13% in sterling. That’s an almost stellar return compared to stock and bond markets. But against the dollar it’s down some 8%. 

How long does the dollar stay so strong? That’s the question we must ask ourselves. On current form, a while longer it would seem.

Norman, who has an extraordinarily good forecasting record, agrees. “The rampant dollar looks like it might be here for a while,” he says.

You don’t need to look further than US interest rates relative to European interest rates and US energy dependency relative to Europe’s, to understand why we are where we are.

“Never in my career did I think we’d see the circumstances we are now in and gold behaving like it is,” says Norman. “It’s extraordinary. The dollar has stolen the show. But nuclear war is a real possibility!”

Gold, by the way, will survive a nuclear explosion, and none of the three types of radiation that follow – alpha, beta and gamma – will affect it.

Photo by Lucas Kapla on Unsplash

Smart investors are still buying gold bullion

But one of the few bright spots in this market is what Norman calls “the literate investor” who continues to support it.

Saul of Pure Gold makes a similar observation. His company makes a point of talking to clients as they buy and sell, to understand their motivations. As a result, they build up a lot of qualitative data.

“Everyone’s looking to protect their wealth in a time when things are really uncertain”. 

But there have been two notable trends he has observed.

First, there has been a notable increase in buyers from the financial world. 

“Traders, investment bankers, financial services, accountants, lawyers – they’ve been buying large sums. 

I find this notable: “Their trade sizes are bigger. The median trade size is probably three times bigger than it was a year ago – and during Covid.”

Saul says many of them are worried about what is going on behind the scenes at the banks. “These are considered investments, where there is a lack of alternatives.”

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Money is moving out of property and in to gold

The second notable trend is the exodus of money from real estate – whether commercial or residential.

“Property investors normally like to remain liquid, so they have cash on hand ready for the next deal. Buy-to-let landlords, commercial landlords, people who buy big buildings and let out floor by floor, developers. Companies and individuals. A lot of them have a lot of cash. They have an appetite for debt, but the increased cost of debt, plus the possibility that the underlying asset will fall in value means there is too much risk for them. They’re now parking that cash in physical gold.”

“We are also seeing a growing amount of people with properties on the market, who when their property sells will move their capital into gold. Many are removing their exposure to debt that they might have taken two or three years ago.”

What we are seeing then is capital flowing from finance and from real estate into gold. I find that telling. 

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China is driving demand for gold bullion

There’s a shortage of physical metal. Premiums are higher than normal, as a result. But that is not deterring buyers. Guess where premiums are highest? Yup, China.

That’s where the demand for gold bullion is highest.

“As much as $50 over spot in some places,” says Norman. “Normally arbitrage irons this out, but that’s not happening.”

The trend of gold making its way from West to East continues.

Here in the West, on the ground, there is a scramble for physical gold that you would not know to look at the gold price. It won’t last. It never does.

The technicals for gold do not look great at all; it’s in a downtrend. That cup-and-handle formation that had us so excited earlier in the year looks like it may have been invalidated. As in 2008, gold looks like it might need to go lower before it goes higher. 

But at grass roots level there is a lot of smart money buying physical gold. 

Somebody has got this wrong. The question is, “who?”

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If you are looking to buy physical gold – coins or bars – let me recommend The Pure Gold Company in London, with whom I have an affiliation deal. You can take delivery or store it safely allocated to you in vaults in safe jurisdictions.

The Flying Frisby is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

This article first appeared at Moneyweek.

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The Flying Frisby
The Flying Frisby - money, markets and more
Readings of brilliant articles from the Flying Frisby. Occasional super-fascinating interviews. Market commentary, investment ideas and more.