From TTT to KFC and
onto a very different gold investment market again...
SO THIS isn't your
father's bull market in gold, and it certainly isn't your grandfather's.
Where gold amid the Great Depression was all about three
T's – teeth, trinkets and terror – it had morphed by the end of
the 1970s into a finger-lickin' combination of Krugerrands, futures, and those "certificates of
confiscation" that were government bonds paying way less than inflation.
This saw gold coins pour into Europe from South Africa,
while US investors geared up their gains (and subsequent losses) on gold
derivatives. By the end, and with gold prices more than 20 times higher
inside a decade, the supply of gold coming back to market – from all
those old teeth and trinkets – swamped new demand. The slow death of
inflation, killed by double-digit interest rates, also killed gold. What was
gold for if no-one could afford to buy jewelry but
investors no longer needed inflation defense?
Fast forward to 2011, and a glib 3-letter handle is as
tough to find as a collapse in gold's fundamentals or a positive real return
on bank savings. As a proportion of total flows, gold investment demand has
now been greater than its peak at the big top of 1980 for three years
running. Supply from jewelry sales has again shot
higher – 13% greater between July and Oct. alone from the same period
of 2010 – but new coin and bar demand continues to swallow it whole,
and then some on top.
Put another way, "It would be imprudent to expect the
gold market to behave as it has done in the past," says the latest Gold
Demand Trends report from our friends at the World Gold
Council. Because over the last 40 years, the internal shape of the market
– the supply and demand fundamentals – have undergone
"dramatic change".
Inside the new 36-page Gold
Demand Trends report, chart after chart in the 10-page
focus – 'The Evolving Structure of Demand & Supply' –
contrasts the fundamentals of the global gold market in 1970, 1980, 1990,
2000 and 2010.
The clear trend, as you can see above, is a move from
scattered, uneven components to a more steady, balanced dynamic, whether in
the source or type of demand (i.e. jewelry,
industrial or gold investment) or the source and type of supply.
Yes, "It's clear that gold buying in China is going
to exceed the record levels of last year...overtaking India in third-quarter jewelry demand," as WGC's Marcus Grubb, managing
director investment, noted today's conference call, guiding investors and
analysts through the latest quarterly figures.
But at 28% of total off-take, China was by no means the
sole pillar of dominant. Indeed, "Europe was for the first time in a
long time the largest single gold investment market – bigger than the
US or China," said Grubb. While the accumulation of physical gold rolls
on in Asia, the underlying bid for gold is spread across the globe. That's a
very different pattern to the big top of 1980. Oddly, perhaps, it's been this
way since the bear-market lows of a decade ago too, as you can see on the
WGC's chart above.
So might this balance of global gold demand tip out of
kilter again? Gold bar and coin demand is increasing in both
India and China, said Grubb, and "we continue to believe you will
see strong demand from both." The possible fall-out from "a hard
landing" in China's double-digit economic growth apart, "the pure
demographics in India [plus] China's high saving rate [make] it hard to see
how the level of demand in tonnes will decline" from here.
Growth rates may slow – and sharp volatility,
especially at record-high prices, such as Indian buyers are suffering now
– will plainly dent demand short-term. But a decline in Asia's
underlying appetite is unlikely, the WGC thinks, thanks to India and China's
"very strong demand profile." This long-term bull run doesn't rely
solely on Western investors and savers looking to flee the financial crisis,
in short. It's further supported by a four-decade record in central-bank
buying and, of course, private household demand from the world's two
fastest-growing major economies. Oh, and a record-low rate of new gold mining
discoveries, despite record-high exploration spending.
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