Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Maybe there is still some lustre in gold

Given the performance of the equity markets in India, most financial newspapers are gung ho about how retail investors should invest in mutual funds or SIP's and not even consider real estate or the eternal global currency, gold, as a form of investment any more. But maybe there are a few gains to be made by investing in Aurum.

Overall thoughts on the commodity
Fundamentally speaking the gold markets seems to be in balance. The degree of imbalance in the short term would at most be demand falling by 1% causing a temporary imbalance but otherwise I do not believe that there is an imbalance in the physical market. With capacity additions now tapering off into H215, as per the new mine addition schedule, I think there could also be a slight tightening in the market. In terms of flows- currency uncertainty, the fall in Chinese markets witnessed last week and the risks of a Greece default and delays of a fed rate hike given US GDP shrinkage numbers being released last week- all lead me to believe that gold is positioned to correct upwards soon.

I don’t know if we will see the 40%+ recovery we have seen in oil prices since they have bottomed but I would not be surprised. I have realized that in the most traded commodity markets- oil and gold- the market imbalances don’t have to be great for there to be an immense pressure on prices induced by financial liquidation. Even with oil the imbalance was of just over a percentage point that precipitated into a 55%+ decline.

Risks to my view
There are two fundamental risks to my view. One would be rising retail domestic investor involvement in the stock markets in India. Jewelry demand in China fell by 10% in Q115. Though this was in comparison to a historic high in first quarter demand in China in 2014 and though the demand was still 27% above the 5 year demand average in Q1, a part of this decline can be attributed to rapid rise in the domestic equity markets. Gold is looked at as an alternative investment by many retail investors. If domestic participation by retail investors in the local stock market rises, some demand for gold would be lost. 8 million new accounts (DMAT) were opened in China in Q115; a 433% increase y-o-y. Given the rising involvement of retail investors in the domestic market in India, jewelry demand supported by need for alternative investment could take a hit.

Another risk to my view is the surge in recycling of gold in Turkey. Given the slowing economic growth, rising unemployment and growing political risk in Turkey, we witnessed the Turkish Lira plunging in Q1. This propelled the price of gold locally to 100 Lira/ kg with gold. This caused a lot of people to cash in their gold for currency and led to a rise in recycling supply for the metal.

How the flows work in Gold’s favor now?
Investors turn to gold, the eternal global currency, when paper currency markets register volatility or in cases of geo-political instability. The world seems to be ripe for both of those to occur now. Currency volatility has dominated 2015. The one popular trade- long dollar- is also lightening up now with people unwinding their long positions owing to uncertainty of a fed rate hike.

Movements in real rates are inversely related to movements in price of gold. With the shrinkage in US GDP noted last week it seems even more unlikely that the Fed will raise rates in their June meeting. This coupled with the rising risk of default in Greece as well as the uncertainty of the future of Chinese markets given the over 9% drop in the Chinese A Shares within two days last week- will force some retail investors into gold.

Moreover the relative strength of the underlying commodity to its miners’ stock price seems to be at a historic high. My guess would be that should there be a correction we would see miners correct a lot more than the commodity price itself.

How do the fundamentals hold up?
Globally, Q1 demand was only slightly weaker than last years’ with most of the fall caused by the increased domestic participation in the equity markets in China. Given the move last week, some of the fringe investors will be drawn back to gold. Moreover growth in demand in India, SE Asia and the US should offset the fall in demand in China.

The key fundamental factor supporting my view on gold is the supply curve. Not only are the mine capacity additions tapering off in H215 but we also see the cost curves adjusting to the lower gold prices having faced lower prices since mid-2013. A correction in gold prices will therefore create increased cash flows per ton for miners who have devoted a lot of the operational energy on lowering costs and adjusting to the new price levels over the past few quarters. 

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