Gold has been
fairly volatile so far this year, seeing plenty of big daily surges
and selloffs. But with all these largely netting out to the
sideways grind of recent months, gold?s price action has been
frustrating for bullish and bearish traders alike. Gaming gold in
these strange central-bank-distorted times requires closely watching
its primary driver, the collective bets of American futures
speculators. They portend a rally.
Just last week,
the venerable World Gold Council published its latest comprehensive
analysis of global gold supply and demand. The intersection of
these core fundamentals ultimately determines prevailing gold price
levels. And since bringing new gold mines online takes well over a
decade, supply levels only change very gradually. So gold prices
are mostly determined by the shifting tides on the demand side.
The largest
component of global gold demand remains jewelry, which accounted for
about 4/7ths of the total in Q1?15 according to the WGC. But this
is also relatively static, with Q1?s 600.8 metric tons running about
5% over the 5-year quarterly average. The real action is on the
investment front, where demand fluctuates considerably with the
prevailing winds of sentiment. So that?s what dictates gold price
levels.
In the first
quarter, global gold investment demand ran 278.8t per the WGC.
While that?s merely about a quarter of total gold demand, its
impact is disproportionately high since it?s the most-volatile
component by far. This was about 15% below the 5-year quarterly
average, quite anemic. With the world?s stock markets endlessly
levitating thanks to
extreme
central-bank money printing, gold investment demand has
withered.
Gold has always
led the alternative-investment category, which thrives when
conventional stocks and bonds are struggling. That?s when investors
remember the great wisdom of prudently diversifying their
portfolios. But when stock markets seemingly do nothing but rally
thanks to the central banks, investors greedily ignore alternatives
to put all their eggs in one very-risky stock basket. And gold
falls deeply out of favor.
With global
investors really pulling back from gold as they chase stock markets,
their influence on gold?s price has naturally waned. This receding
investment tide has left one group of traders with an incredibly
disproportionate impact on the gold price. American futures
speculators? collective bets are dominating gold with investors
missing in action. So the key to gaming gold?s coming price trends
lies in their holdings.
This has been true
for the past couple years, since gold?s brutal
stock-market-levitation-fueled collapse in Q2?13. The metal
plummeted 22.8% then in its biggest quarterly loss in 93 years!
That scared investors away from gold, giving American futures
speculators free reign to run amuck. But even though the track
record since of them driving gold prices is crystal-clear, it?s
still not common knowledge in the gold realm.
The gold market is
maddeningly opaque, with very few bothering to try and understand
it. Even on days with very large price moves on the order of 2%,
the financial media superficially glosses over the real causes. It
attributes gold?s moves to fleeting world news, such as central-bank
jawboning or some geopolitical event. But it is American futures
speculators? buying and selling that drives gold those days.
Unfortunately,
futures trading isn?t easy to understand. It is a
radically-different arena than stock trading, a hyper-leveraged
zero-sum game only played by a small fraction of the world?s
traders. And the reams of data produced by their collective buying
and selling is complex and challenging to interpret. On top of
that, its resolution is limited to only weekly which degrades its
utility to game daily gold price action.
But if you take
the time to understand it, gold?s price behavior not only makes much
more sense but its likely near-term direction becomes much clearer.
Today American futures speculators? collective bets imply gold is
in for a major rally. Gold?s primary driver is looking very
bullish today, in stark contrast to the ubiquitous bearish sentiment
out there. American future speculators are very likely to be buying
big soon.
Their collective
holdings are published once a week by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission in its famous Commitments of Traders report. While
released late Friday afternoons, the positions data on the CoT
reports is current to the preceding Tuesday. And though complex, it
can ultimately be distilled down into the futures positions held by
hedgers and opposing speculators. It?s the latter that dominate
gold.
Hedgers either
produce or consume gold in commercial operations, so their interest
in the futures market is merely for locking in gold prices to smooth
operating cashflows. And their supply and demand for gold and
therefore gold futures is usually consistent. Speculators, on the
other hand, are simply taking the other side of hedgers? trades to
make directional bets on the gold price. Their positions fluctuate
wildly with sentiment.
Our chart this
week looks at the total number of long and short gold-futures
contracts held by American futures speculators since early 2014.
The green line shows their total longs, the red their total shorts,
and the yellow the total deviation from the normal-year averages of
these positions between 2009 to 2012. The gold price is
superimposed on top in blue, and is incredibly correlated to
speculators? bets.
With gold
investors largely missing in action, it?s American futures
speculators? bets that are dominating gold?s fortunes these
days! There?s nothing more important for gold traders to understand
in these surreal times. Gold is highly correlated with both
speculators? long and short bets in gold futures. So seeing where
these are running compared to recent precedent offers great insights
into where gold is heading next.
Carefully studying
and digesting this chart is essential for all investors and
speculators interested in gaming gold. This metal has only enjoyed
major rallies in recent years when speculators bought gold futures,
both adding new long contracts and covering existing short ones.
This dynamic fueled the sharp gold rallies in February 2014, June
2014, and January 2015, and will absolutely drive gold?s next big
surge.
Conversely it was
speculators? gold-futures selling that forced all gold?s major
selloffs in recent years. Whether they sold existing long
contracts, added new short ones, or both, gold fell sharply in the
face of this temporary supply pressure. This ignited gold?s steep
selloffs in March 2014, May 2014, September 2014, and February
2015. And the next time big futures selling arrives, gold will
certainly fall again.
Thus the gold
price is highly positively correlated with American speculators?
total gold-futures longs, and highly negatively correlated with
their gold-futures shorts. The blue gold-price line mirrors the
green total-longs line, while moving in lockstep opposition to the
red total-shorts line. Speculators? collective gold-futures bets
have been all that mattered for gold prices in recent years,
trumping everything else.
And this is likely
to continue until investors start returning en masse, since their
absence is what left futures speculators with such an outsized
influence on gold price levels. A second factor contributing to
this is the extreme leverage inherent in gold-futures
trading. A single gold contract controls 100 ounces of the yellow
metal, which is worth $120k at $1200 gold. Yet hardly any capital
has to support those bets.
Since the Federal
Reserve?s Regulation T in 1974, leverage in the US stock markets has
been legally limited to 2 to 1. If that was also the case for gold,
speculators would have to keep $60k in their account for each gold
contract they wanted to trade. But futures are the Wild West of
trading, where normal rules don?t apply. Today the minimum
maintenance margin on a gold-futures contract is a vanishingly-small
$4k.
That means
American speculators can run leverage of up to 30 to 1 in
gold futures, incredibly high! So while $1 risked in the stock
markets can control $2 worth of stock at most, $1 risked in gold
futures can control $30 of gold. This extreme 30x leverage gives
futures speculators a wildly-disproportionate impact on gold price
levels. And without that far-larger pool of investor capital to
overshadow this, speculators dominate.
With such
hyper-risky leverage, futures speculators can?t afford to be wrong
for long. At 30x, a mere 3.3% gold move against traders? positions
will wipe out 100% of their capital risked. And it doesn?t take
gold long to move 3%+, it last happened just a week ago. Futures
speculators? losses can even mushroom way beyond that if they meet
margin calls to hold on to trades moving against them. It?s an
exceedingly-risky game.
So when gold
starts rallying, futures speculators start buying. They add new
long-side contracts, hoping to chase gold?s gains as momentum
builds. And they rush to cover existing shorts, which means
buying offsetting long contracts. Buying longs to cover shorts has
the same bullish price impact as buying new longs, propelling gold
higher. And the CoT data reveals that speculators are once again
poised to buy big.
Despite gold
generally swooning since early 2014, American speculators have been
adding to their long-side gold-futures exposure on balance. Their
total long gold-futures positions have carved a solid uptrend
since early 2014, which is rendered in the chart above. And today,
their total long-side bets are languishing at the bottom of that
trend channel at support. That?s about as low as they?ve dropped
recently.
Each other support
approach in recent years was followed by major buying, which soon
catapulted the speculators? total long-side gold-futures bets
back up to resistance. The trading range of that uptrend
channel is roughly 50k contracts. And that?s a heck of a lot of
gold buying! Convert that into the metric tons that world gold
supply and demand is measured in, and we are talking about a
staggering 155.5t!
The World Gold
Council?s latest fundamental data shows global gold investment
demand ran 820.6t in all of 2014. Render that in monthly terms, and
it?s about 68.4t per month. Past surges of speculators? long-side
bets from support to resistance of their uptrend channel have only
taken a month or two. So that equates to new marginal gold
demand on the order of 77.8t per month, more than doubling
average levels!
And we haven?t
even gotten to the bullish part yet. American speculators have no
obligation at all to buy new long-side gold-futures contracts. They
will only do that voluntarily once gold has rallied enough to
convince them its upward momentum is sustainable. But covering
shorts is a totally different story, as that is a legal contractual
obligation. Shorting gold futures involves first borrowing them,
debts that must be repaid.
So unlike new
long-side buying, short covering is compulsory. Once gold
starts rallying, speculators are forced to rush to cover these
hyper-leveraged downside bets. This process unfolds rapidly as it
quickly feeds on itself. The more gold-futures contracts
speculators buy to close their shorts, the quicker the gold price
rallies. The faster and higher gold climbs, the more other
speculators are forced to cover their own shorts.
Since early 2014
speculators? total gold-futures short positions have also formed a
tight trading range, meandering sideways between 75k-contract
support and 150k-contract resistance. As of the latest CoT report
before this essay was published, their total downside bets ran near
134k contracts. This is way up on the high side of their trading
range, as the chart above reveals. That means big short covering
is coming.
And that?s very
bullish for gold! After each shorting peak of recent years,
speculators soon bought to cover enough gold futures to drive their
total shorts back down to 75k support. This has happened no less
than 3 times since early 2014! And each short-covering spree
was relatively fast, unfolding over a few months or so. Unwinding
enough shorts to return to support again will require about 59k
contracts of buying.
That?s the
equivalent of another 183.5t of gold demand over several
months, or around 61.2t per month! That?s serious additional
demand, around 9/10ths of normal average monthly investment demand.
That short covering has to be done, and the gold gains it triggers
are likely to motivate the other speculators on the long side to
resume their buying. With gold?s primary driver so set up for major
buying, gold looks really bullish.
The ironic thing
about American futures speculators is they are always wrong as a
herd when gold is topping or bottoming. For all their
sophistication, they are as susceptible to popular groupthink greed
and fear as everyone else. So as the chart above shows, they are
the most bullish when gold is high and ready to roll over. And
they?re the most bearish when gold is bottoming and due to soon
surge.
This is readily
evident in their collective bets. Around gold tops, their total
long-side positions in gold futures are high while their short-side
ones are low. The opposite is true near gold bottoms, with low
longs and high shorts. And that?s what we?re seeing today, with
long-side contracts way down at their uptrend?s support and
short-side contracts nearly back up to their trend channel?s
resistance. This is great news for gold!
And some
gold-buying catalyst is likely soon approaching. Though it
feels like this metal has just been grinding sideways on balance, it
has actually spent the past half-year climbing in a new uptrend.
And gold has been very resilient through this latest surge in
speculator shorting, meaning they aren?t getting much bang for their
buck in their risky hyper-leveraged bearish bets. Gold is fairly
strong given the level of shorts.
Sooner or later
something is going to happen to get investors thinking about gold
again, likely the lofty central-bank-levitated world stock markets
rolling over. As investors start rediversifying into gold to help
protect their portfolios, their buying will drive an upside
breakout. And that will send the necessarily-technically-oriented
leveraged futures speculators scrambling to cover their high shorts,
accelerating gold?s gains.
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speculators can ride this coming buying in gold?s primary driver
with the metal itself or the gold ETFs. These are led by the
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The bottom line is
gold?s primary driver in recent years has been the collective
positions of American futures speculators. Their hyper-leveraged
bets have given them outsized influence on the gold price in recent
years as investors pulled back. And today speculators? gold-futures
bets are very bearish, low on the long side and high on the short
side. This is very bullish for gold, portending big futures buying
nearing.
When speculators?
gold-futures selling reverses back into buying, this process tends
to unfold relatively quickly over a few months or so. And this
futures buying alone has the potential to literally triple normal
monthly gold investment demand over that span. That would certainly
fuel a sharp gold rally, likely even large enough to pique
investors? interest. So gold looks very bullish today with its
primary driver poised for big buying.
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