Lokeshwarri S. K.
The dramatic drop in domestic and international gold prices over the
past 10 days has shaken investor confidence in the yellow metal, even as
the gold-buying-brigade throngs jewellery shops. Does this crash signal
the end of the rally that began at the turn of this millennium?
To answer that question, we need to look at what drove the gold prices
higher from the low of $254 an ounce in 2001 to the peak of $1,920 in
2011. Data disseminated by the World Gold Council show that it was not
the demand for gold jewellery, but the demand for investment that
spurred this rally. Gold jewellery purchases, which accounts for more
than 40 per cent of the demand, is on the wane, with the galloping
prices perhaps dampening the fervour.
The demand for jewellery is down from around 2,500 tonnes in 2003 to
1,908 tonnes in 2012. But investment demand for gold bars and coins has
increased from 304 tonnes to 1,256 tonnes during this period. Similarly,
the demand for gold from Exchange Traded Funds has doubled between 2004
and 2012.
What fueled the rally?
With many of the emerging economies entering a growth phase from 2003,
inflation too moved higher, making investors zero in on gold as a hedge.
That the dollar was on a downward spiral in this period, with the
dollar index losing 40 per cent of its value, also helped. The sharp
increase in gold prices attracted investment funds in search of
high-yielding assets, fuelling the price increase.
Another group that can stoke gold prices is the speculators (hedge
funds, investment funds, trading companies and so on), which take a
leveraged bet on prices through futures and options traded on exchanges.
This market is many times the size of the gold spot market and can take
prices above their intrinsic value in a vortex of buying. A classic
example was the rise seen in crude oil prices in mid-2008.
One way to track the moves of the gold traders is through the positions
they hold in the futures and options on exchanges. These positions
surged from 2003 to a peak towards the end of 2011. But trading interest
has been down by a third since then. This herd behaviour is typical
among traders who chase assets that are rising and move out equally fast
once they sense that the price has peaked.
Investment funds and fund managers out to make profits for their
investors too lose interest in an asset that is declining or trending
sideways. With international gold prices going sideways over the last
two years, delivering 10 and 5 per cent return in 2011 and 2012
respectively, many investment managers are also parting with their gold
holding.
Trend of Gold Price between 1990 to 2013 |
That gold is losing its lure for investors is also reflected in WGC
data, which show that gold investment in bars, coins and exchange-traded
products dropped 8.3 per cent to 424.7 tonnes in the fourth quarter of
2012 from a year earlier. For 2012, investments were down 9.8 per cent
to 1,534.6 tonnes.
Not the end of the road
With speculators and investors in search of higher returns moving away
from gold, does it mean that the prices are now going to continue
falling? No, because there are many factors that are still supportive of
gold prices.
Gold jewellery demand that was subdued due to higher prices can revive
with the price decline. Inflation continues to be a concern in most
emerging economies and depreciating value of fiat money will make many
investors park at least part of their money in gold or gold-backed
assets.
Central Banks will have to continue to increase their gold holdings in a
bid to diversify their risk from a weak dollar and euro.
Strength of the dollar is ephemeral since the U.S. government has to
resolve how to deal with the debt ceiling in the coming months.
Expenditure cuts are likely to affect the nascent growth witnessed
there. Sovereign debt troubles of euro-zone countries such as Italy,
Greece, Spain and Cyprus are far from over and any trouble there will
make risk aversion soar, sending money into gold.
These factors can save the gold prices from a deep decline. But prices
could now readjust and settle in a new range, perhaps between $1,100 and
$1,500.
But a steep rally taking the gold back to its peak is ruled out in the coming years.
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