For many years now gold and silver –by its
pattern of following gold wherever it goes— have been treated by
traders, investors and central banks as a ‘counter to the U.S.
dollar’ and quite rightly so; this definition, however, applies
primarily to the long-term value of the dollar and not simply to the daily
gyrations of the dollar’s exchange rate.
For
many months now, gold and silver have not simply acted as a counter to the
dollar but linked on a day-to-day basis with the euro. It’s reasonable,
one would think, for them to have that relationship because the euro is the
second most important currency in the world. But when the euro itself has
problems with its value then the relationship must surely become suspect?
What
we’ve seen lately is gold and silver prices moving with (and often
faster, both ways) than the euro, but the link remain solid. With concern for
the future gold and silver prices in mind, it’s time to examine this
relationship to see where it’s taking these precious metals. With the
Eurozone crisis moving to potential ‘runs’ on Greek and Spanish banks,
the future of the euro is now on the line. A look at a precipitous fall in
the euro and the potential for gold and silver to follow is warranted.
Investors should be prepared for very volatile and surprising gold and silver
price moves.
Meaning of ‘Counter to the Dollar’
It would
have been better had the saying included currencies in general. With gold
respected worldwide as alternative money to currencies, the presence of the
two in national gold and foreign exchange reserves enabled the balance of
changing values in the two to allow the net value to remain relatively
constant. As the gold and silver prices fell against currencies, so the value
of currencies rose. Central bankers hold these reserves to ensure that a
nation has reserves with which to continue trading internationally in the
event of a national disaster preventing international dealing by the state.
The maintenance of their value in all weathers is a fundamental necessity.
With
the U.S. dollar being around 63% of global reserves, it’s appropriate
for European nations to hold gold in large quantities. The table below shows
the percentages that the developed world holds as a percentage of their
reserves:
World Official Gold Holdings as at May 2012
|
COUNTRY
|
TONNES HELD
|
% OF RESERVES
|
United States
|
8,133.5
|
75.9%
|
Germany
|
3,396.3
|
72.8%
|
Italy
|
2,451.8
|
72.6%
|
France
|
2,435.4
|
72.6%
|
Switzerland
|
1,040.1
|
17.5%
|
Netherlands
|
612.5
|
60.9%
|
E.C.B.
|
502.1
|
33.85%
|
Portugal
|
382.5
|
90.9%
|
Spain
|
281.6
|
31.3%
|
Austria
|
280.0
|
56.6%
|
Greece
|
111.7
|
82.2%
|
The
gold holding will only have significance when the financial weather turns
very stormy, not on a day-to-day basis. That’s why when central bankers
buy, they are relatively price insensitive. Their target is to acquire
volumes of gold because it’s that volume or the number of ounces that
counts when push comes to shove. When they buy they simply accept direct
offers of gold that the market makes to them. Chasing prices is out. The
long-term steady acquisition of ounces and tonnes
is the objective. A look at the figures in this table again highlights what
we mean in a market that supplies only around 4,400 tonnes
a year. Of this 36% is recycled gold, which can prove a heavy variable.
Another 700 tonnes never leaves its country of
origin. Thus the daily gold price depends upon less than half of the annual
gold supply reaching the international gold market. So central banks are
cautious, price insensitive buyers.
As we have seen in the market place, traders mainly
have been linking the euro to the gold price’s moves. There’s a
danger that readers of this article and subscribers will think it right to
make decisions on the basis of the moves in the euro against the dollar only.
To do so from now on may be the wrong moves.
Tied to the Euro?
The
Eurozone crisis has seen remarkably little change in the €: $ exchange
rate considering the extent of the sovereign debt crisis inside the Eurozone.
Its peak was at €1: $1.40 and its low today at €1: $1.2550. This
is only a move of 10%. Much of this narrow range of movement has to do with
the swap arrangements between the Federal Reserve and the European Central
Bank who have actively ‘managed’ the exchange rate to ensure as
much stability as they can. If it had been left entirely to market forces,
the picture would have been very different.
If a
financial panic ensues in the Eurozone’s banks, it’s possible
that we see the euro fall back to its start point around €1: $1. Will
the gold price follow it down? Take a look at the second table below and see
what happens to gold if it follows the euro.
€1: $ rate $
Gold Price €
Gold Price
€1: $1.2535 $1,560 €1,244.52
€1: $1.2000 $1,493.42 €1,244.52
€1: $1.1750 $1,462.31 €1,244.52
€1: $1.1500 $1,431.20 €1,244.52
€1: $1.1250 $1,400.09 €1,244.52
€1: $1.1000 $1,368.92 €1,244.52
€1: $1.0750 $1,337.86 €1,244.52
€1: $1.0500 $1,306.75 €1,244.52
€1: $1.0250 $1,275.63 €1,244.52
€1: $1.0000 $1,244.52 €1,244.52
|
Let’s
take the current gold price of $1,560 as the start point for the projections
and move the gold price with the decline of the euro.
Please
note that it’s the euro that’s falling alongside all those
currencies that look to the Eurozone as their key trading partner and to
whose currency they are determined to adhere in a tight trading band (by
interference if necessary). This does not reflect U.S. dollar strength; the
dollar has been steady against other currencies and will likely remain so.
Before
we answer the question, ‘Will gold follow the euro down?’
it’s good to ask what the gold prices have been in both the euro and
the dollar over the last decade.
In 2005
the gold price in the U.S. dollar was around $300 and around €240.
Today
we see the gold price in the U.S. dollar at $1,560 or over five times higher
than it was then. As to the euro price the same multiplier of over five times
is true again at €1,244.52.
So our
dilemma is that traders who have been driving the gold price of late will
attempt to move the gold price with the euro’s fall. Will investors
from other nations follow suit?
To
answer this we have to look closely at other buyers using other currencies.
USD investors look at their dollar based Technical analysis and project price
patterns in the dollar gold and silver price.
With
somewhere close to 60% of the world’s gold demand coming from China and
India, we must recognize that those investors look at the gold price in the
Indian Rupee and the Chinese Yuan.
The
Chinese government wants their people to buy gold so are not happy to see the
Yuan appreciate, or see their own people’s gold investments suffer
losses in the Yuan.
In
India, the scene is different –the Rupee has been very weak, having
fallen over the last year from Rs.42: $1 to Rs.56: $1 a fall of 33%.
Accordingly gold prices in the Rupee have risen as the dollar gold price has
fallen.
Right
now, Indian demand is weak, being supplied mainly by sales of locally held
gold, suffocating gold imports, so Indian demand is almost absent from the
international market, at the moment. This leaves the weight of demand on
Central banks and the Chinese with developed world demand at present lows.
This
gives traders the reins over the gold prices on a daily basis but for how
long and at what price?
Indian
gold investors are very price conscious. Their buying pattern is to wait for
a floor to be established so that when they buy, they won’t see prices
fall afterwards. They believe that the gold price in the Rupee will go up
after that. They are not so wise, yet, to see that the Rupee’s value is
not likely to increase, bringing Rupee gold prices down. All they see are
Rupee prices rising, as the Rupee falls.
What we
will see if the above table is seen in the next few weeks is the gold price
in the dollar falling faster than Rupee gold prices are rising.
This will give the appearance of a Rupee ‘floor’ price and they
will enter the market and support Chinese and central bank buying.
If the
Reserve Bank of India does succeed in halting the fall of the Rupee this
probability will happen faster. If they succeed in strengthening the Rupee by
‘managing’ (i.e. interfering in the forces driving the Rupee) it
then Rupee gold prices will fall. That will bring
out Indian buyers for
sure.
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