On a firmly rising gold price the UK is one of the largest net
importers of gold in 2016. The gold price went up 25 % from
$1,061.5 dollars per troy ounce on January 1 to $1,325.8 on June 31. Over
this period the UK net imported 583 tonnes and GLD inventory mushroomed by
308 tonnes.
In the month of June the UK gross imported 154.2 tonnes, up 22 % from May,
and gross export was 1.9 tonnes, down 37 % from the previous month. Net
import into the UK resulted in a robust 152.3 tonnes, up 23 % month on
month.
Gross import by the UK from Switzerland remained resilient at 68.5
tonnes, up 11 % from May, while gross export to Switzerland was nix.
The most noteworthy gold exporters to the UK in June 2016 were:
Notable, the UK net imported a record amount from China mainland
at 3.2 tonnes. This is very exceptional and has never happened in recent
history, as far as I know.
Although the tonnage isn’t staggering, the transfer becomes newsworthy
when viewed in perspective. The Chinese have an interest in
becoming a dominant player in the international gold market. To
strengthen their economy they wish not only for more physical (private and
official) gold reserves, another objective is a broad development of
gold market infrastructure and integration with the international
market. Read what PBOC governor Zhou
Xiaochuan had to say in 2004 at the London Bullion Market Association
(LBMA) conference :
The establishment and development of China’s gold market marks the
basic completion of the construction of a market for major financial products
in China, which will provide better micro grounds for China’s macro economic
adjustment. For further development, China’s gold market should gradually
realize three transformations: from commodity trade to financial product
trade, from spot transactions to futures transactions, and from a domestic
market to integration with the international market.
…. gold still has a strong financial nature and remains an
indispensable investment tool. In major financial centers in the world, the
gold market – together with the money, securities and FX market – constitutes
the main part of the financial market.
China’s gold market must integrate into the global market. ….
China should actively create conditions for its gold market to become an
important part of the international gold market.
… gold still bears the marked nature of money under the modern
financial system.
In September 2014 the
Shanghai International Gold Exchange (SGEI) was erected in the SFTZ,
followed by the
launch of the Shanghai Gold Fix in April 2016, but up until now both
events did not elevate China’s share in the international gold market as the
Chinese had hoped for. But the Chinese always set out multiple strategies at
once to reach their objectives.
Meanwhile, in the past 14 months four Chinese banks have penetrated
the LBMA Gold Price
auction. Namely, Bank of China, Bank Of Communications, China Construction
Bank and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC). In addition, ICBC
Standard Bank has become an LBMA
market maker for spot trading and a clearing member of “the not-for-profit company London
Precious Metal Clearing Limited (LPMCL)”, for which it has purchased the
lease on Deutsche
Bank’s 1,500 tonnes gold vault last January, and bought the 2,000
tonnes gold vault from Barclays in May. Both mammoth vaults are
located in London.
ICBC
Standard Bank on the latest developments:
This enables us to better execute on our strategy to become one of
the largest Chinese banks in the precious metals market.
Is it a coincidence that China is suddenly exporting gold to the UK while
ICBC Standard Bank was recently accepted as clearing member of the LPMCL and
utilizes two gold vaults in London? Likely the gold export to the UK is
connected to the new clearing and vaulting activities by ICBC Standard Bank.
Next to China’s strategy to develop the SGEI for
gold trading in renminbi along the Silk Road, they’re actively
increasing presence in the London Bullion Market.
However, I don’t think the majority of gold imports into the UK
this year – aside from the import from China – are connected to ICBC
Standard Bank, the imports mainly reflect Western institutional demand.
Net gold flows through London have been correlated to the price of
gold long before the Chinese entered the international precious metals
construction.
So, although the 3.2 tonnes exported from China to the UK are exceptional,
the UK manifesting itself as a net importer while the price is rising is
quite normal.
The Gold Price And Global Flows
Here’s a theory hopefully sparking fruitful debate: the gold price
is set by physical supply and demand in the West.
Since 2013 when the price of gold declined significantly in all major
currencies, we’ve witnessed a massive exodus of physical gold from West to
East. In 2013 the UK, housing the London Bullion market, net exported 1,424
tonnes, the highest amount since 1997 when 2,473 tonnes were net exported (source
James Turk).
In the 2014 and 2015 the UK continued to be a net exporter. Large
wholesale 400-ounce London Good Delivery bars were mainly transported to
Switzerland, where being recast into 1 Kg 9999 fine bars for the Asian market.
From international
merchandise trade statistics we could clearly track the gold flowing from
the UK, to Switzerland, to Hong Kong, finally reaching China mainland. We
could even see a correlation between UK net export and SGE
withdrawals from early 2013 up until December 2015.
Currently China is still buying gold, albeit
less than in recent years, but the West has turned into a net buyer as
well, pressuring supply and forcefully driving up the price.
Some commentators in the gold space deemed it impossible China was
importing 1,400 tonnes on average in the past three years while the price was
going down. The price was set purely in the paper markets, so they
concluded. According to my analysis China was able to buy the
tonnages they did by the willingness of the West to supply the metal –
exactly who in the West was so eager to supply is another story.
The falling gold price from 2013 until 2015 and the exceptional tonnages
China was importing were caused by strong physical supply from the West.
Simplified, if 1,400 tonnes are imported into China, one can observe strong
demand, but the corresponding supply had to be at least equally strong (or
stronger) on a declining price. The nominal volumes of supply and demand are
always equal, the difference in strength between both is what sets the price.
In my logic, that is. What happened in the past years was that the Chinese
were merely buying the physical supply coming from the West, buying as much
as they could. A once in a lifetime opportunity.
Remember, if you see 1,400 tonnes being moved into China,
that’s a lot of demand, but it’s a lot of supply as well
— BullionStar.com (@KoosJansen) June 10, 2016
As stated in a
previous post I think the price of gold can be, and is, easily manipulated
through derivatives in the short term. Through leveraged futures contracts or
derivatives in the
highly opaque OTC market the price of gold can be efficiently managed for
short periods. But in the long term the price can only be decided by physical
supply and demand. If any entity for example desires to suppress the
gold price in the long term then physical metal has to be supplied into the
open market or an undeniably vivacious spread will appear between the paper
and physical price.
What I’m seeing is that physical gold flows across the globe are
highly correlated with the gold price. Have a look at the chart
below showing the gold price versus the net flow through the UK (and GLD
inventory change). There’s a clear correlation.
The same correlation can be seen in net gold flows through Switzerland –
which can be considered as a proxy for Western demand just like net flows
through the UK.
In general, every time the West starts hoarding in the UK and Switzerland
the price goes up, and when they sell the price declines. I think these
charts show that there is more correlation between physical supply and demand
than is widely assumed in the gold space.
Take this last chart for example. The UK net importing huge amounts
of physical gold coincides with the price going up, and exactly when they
turn to net exporting the price goes down. So then how can the price have
nothing to do physical supply and demand?
On a final note. I find it remarkable that research (by Ronan Manly, BullionStar, and
Nick Laird, Goldchartsrus.com)
pointed out that the physical float in London was nearly running out
in 2015 and shortly after the UK starts net importing and the price goes
up.
When in December 2015 the UK net exported 184 tonnes of gold, which
was the third highest amount on record, I wrote In
February 2016 [brackets added by me]:
When there is no more gold left in London to export, the gold price
is likely to go higher on strong global demand induced by economic
headwind.
How much gold is left in London? We can make a rough estimate, ….Research
by Ronan Manly
… and Nick Laird … pointed
out there were roughly 6,256 tonnes of gold in London in June 2015.
However, of this total at least 3,779 tonnes was monetary gold owned by
central banks around the world stored at the Bank Of England (BOE), which is
[presumably] not for sale. The remaining 2,477 tonnes in non-monetary
gold were potentially for
sale. [Note, this number included 1,116 tonnes in ETF gold outside BOE
vaults and 1,355 tonnes stored within BOE vaults, leaving 6 tonnes in the
LBMA system outside the BOE]
In any case, we know now that from June until December the UK
net exported 390 tonnes of non-monetary gold, which leaves approximately
2,087 tonnes in non-monetary gold in the UK as of 31 December 2015. Assuming
the People’s Bank Of China hasn’t purchased some of this gold and covertly
exported it to Beijing in the past months.
As long as London is selling gold and China is buying the price
can go down. However, if London stops selling (or becomes
a buyer) the price can make a reversal.