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GOLD
GOES ALL GOOGLE! OUTLOOK FOR 2007
by Adrian
Ash
BullionVault.com
January 25, 2007
"...Gold
suddenly looks like a crowded trade. But does Wall Street's love of the
metal really have to mean the end of the bull market...?"
Don't whisper it too loudly, but gold suddenly seems all-too popular.
Both the Times and the Telegraph in London just ran
bullish reports on gold. The Financial Times notes that
institutional money has a "growing love affair with the
metal..."
Deutsche Bank
AG, the world's largest securities firm, expects gold to rise as the US
dollar falls further, and individual traders and dealers are also
backing gold to go higher this year. Bloomberg says that 22 out of 31
finance professionals surveyed earlier this month all advise buying the
metal.
Gold's right
up there with Google, in fact! The top 100 amateur investors tracked by
Marketocracy.com now recommend Goldcorp, a major gold mining stock,
alongside shares in the internet search engine.
Yet Google
now trades for 64 times its 2006 earnings. Both Goldman Sachs and Bank
of America just reiterated their "buy" recommendations on the
stock. What on earth did gold do to deserve this red-hot dotcom for
company?
"Now
that everyone expects [gold] funds to continue powering ahead, expect a
downturn," warns one City fund manager. There's too much “hot
money” in the metal, says another.
Could they be
right? There's a lot of speculative money riding on the answer. Net
longs in the US gold futures market rose 19% last week. So let's take a
look at the year ahead, and see what 2007 might have in store.
India's
Demand: Set to Rise?
As BullionVault.com
has reported for Financial Sense before, India leads the world in its
love of physical gold – and by March the sub-continent is due to get
the first of three exchange-traded gold funds (ETFs) too. These products
have proven very popular in the West, despite charging 0.4% annual
storage fees and merely backing each share with gold held in trust,
rather than giving investors outright gold ownership.
New gold ETFs
in 2007 are also planned for Germany, Italy, Belgium and Luxembourg. But
India could put them all in the shade.
Gold already has "the highest penetration of any other financial
product," says the head of Kotak Mahindra Bank, the company behind
one of India's new gold ETFs. The numbers are staggering. Private
individuals in India own more than 14,000 tonnes of plain necklaces,
rings and bracelets – nearly 10% of the world's entire above-ground
gold stocks, and a larger hoard than the US, German and French
governments' put together.
But until
now, "India [has been] a one-way street when it comes to
investment," says David Gornall, director of Natexis Commodity
Markets Ltd. Exporting scrap gold is illegal, so the only way of taking
profits in the metal is selling to a jeweller –who might charge 10-15%
in fees. Kotak Gold, on the other hand, will charge 4% in and 1% out, on
a minimum investment of around $1,200.
The festival of Akshaya Thrithiya in late April should then give a more
traditional boost to India's physical gold demand. The third most
auspicious day in the Hindu calendar, it packed Bangalore’s 2,000 gold
shops “choc-a-bloc” last spring, says the Times of India. Across
southern India, 70,000kg of gold jewelry was sold in one day. The number
of shoppers rose 50% from 2005. This year's festival could see gold
sales rise further if last autumn's Diwali festival proves a guide. In
October, says Suresh Hundia of the Bombay Bullion Association, India's
gold consumption more than doubled in October.
Why
Asia's Boom Might Cut Its Demand for Gold
Don't call your broker to buy a fistful of gold call options just yet,
however. "A feature of Indian demand is its extreme sensitivity to
price volatility," notes Kotak Bank, because these seasoned gold
investors hate buying necklaces and bracelets on a spike, only to watch
the price fall back. This month's violent action in gold prices may dent
Indian demand this spring. What's more, says Neil Meader at the GFMS
consultancy in London, "the modernization of an economy can be a
double-edged sword" for gold investment.
In poor rural
areas with no formal banking system, gold often acts as a savings
account. But as India and China modernize, people may put their money
into bank accounts rather than plain gold jewelry. "Certainly in
the case of China," says Meader, "we've seen a huge shift in
patterns of jewelry buying from the very high-carat to 18-carat and
gem-set jewelry." More money is going on design, and that's sure to
cut the fine weight of gold in each piece.
Gold remains "an integral part of Indian culture" however, as
Gornall notes for Natexis, and with the number of households earning
above $80,000 per year set to treble in the next decade, it seems more
likely that gold ownership will continue to grow. On a per capita basis,
India still lags more developed markets. Per head of the population,
Turkey's jewelry sales in 2006 were six times greater than India's in
volume terms, according to data from Virtual Metals and Fortis Bank.
Increased wealth certainly hasn't hurt Chinese or Indian gold demand so
far in this bull market, and two billion people living through the
greatest economic boom in history can buy an awful lot of gold jewelry!
Over the last three months, strong physical buying has kicked in every
time the gold price dipped towards $600 per ounce – twice what it was
only four years ago.
Gold
Mining Supply: Set to Keep Falling?
If jewelry
demand from Asia's emerging giants puts a floor under gold prices in
2007, what might set the ceiling? Despite the bull market, gold mining
supplies actually fell 2% last year, says Helen Holten at Standard
Chartered Bank, and GFMS's latest data agree. Virtual Metals in London
reckon output slipped only 1.5% from 2005. Whatever the true figure,
it's clear the leading analysts agree that mining supply fell.
Gold mining companies are trying to shift all the earth they can, of
course. But mounting problems of cost, politics and finance are capping
how fast they can dig gold ore out of the ground.
First, the "easy gold" in secure and safe regions has already
been mined. North American output this year is forecast at just 78% of
2002 levels. South African output has halved since 1998. Ore grades in
both countries are falling fast too, while less stable regions have yet
to pick up the pace. Zimbabwe's gold output, for instance, has fallen to
"pathetic levels" according to press reports from Harare.
Then there's cost. Newmont Mining Inc., the second largest gold miner in
the world, was recently downgraded to "underweight" by
mining-stock analysts due to its increased expenses. In the five years
to November, average production costs at Newmont rose by two-thirds per
ounce. Prudential Equity now forecasts that Newmont's combined output
with Barrick Gold, the largest gold miner in the world, will be 40 or 50
tonnes less than expected in 2007.
As the gold miners extract their ore, the value of their balance-sheet
assets shrinks. But replacing gold-in-the-ground with new discoveries is
proving tougher than ever. Westhouse Securities estimates that between
1985 and 2003, new gold ounce discoveries slipped by 30% from the
previous 15 years. Each new ounce discovered also cost 2.6 times as much
to locate. And large deposits – judged at 2.5 million ounces or more
– aren't enough to replace the major gold mining companies' current
rate of production, says the Metals Economics Group in Halifax, Canada.
Between 1992 and 2005, world output totaled 1.1 billion ounces. New
large reserves were barely half that size.
Socialist Thieves + Crazy Gold Mining Bosses = Shrinking Supply
Gold mining stocks also face the classic problem thrown up by a
commodities boom – populist governments stealing their assets. The
military government in Fiji just seized the Vatukoula mine belonging to
DRDGold, an Australian firm. In December the Russian environmental
agency Rospriradnadzor revoked two mining licenses owned by Peter Hambro,
the London-listed gold producer. Western gold mining firms must also
contend with a new political threat bred much closer to home –
environmental activists backed by charities like Greenpeace, Friends of
the Earth and American Oxfam.
Take Gabriel Resources' project at Rosia Montana in Romania, for
instance. It may hold the largest undeveloped gold reserves in Europe,
but upturning five mountains to get at 450 tonnes of gold doesn't fit
with today's green politics. And there are no "carbon offset"
contracts for spilling mercury, cyanide and heavy metals into local
rivers.
What can the major gold miners do to defend their share price? Like any
sane corporate executives today, mining bosses have gone crazy for
mergers and acquisitions. Merrill Lynch said 10 days ago that global
gold mining M&A hit a record $19.3 billion in 2006 amid frantic
corporate action. But digging for gold on the stock market did nothing
to increase total global supplies. Nor does M&A simply shift gold
reserves from one balance sheet to another.
The net effect is to cut exploration spending as the majors focus on
boardroom deals and the number of risk-taking juniors is reduced.
Falling reserves replacement over the last 10 years "may result in
gold supply shortages in the long term," warn the analysts at
MEG.com.
Will today's M&A frenzy prove short-sighted? Consider how the
industry responded to the slump in gold prices during the 1980s and
'90s. By June 2001, says the Mitsui Hedge Book, the global gold mining
industry had sold forward a massive 3,421 tonnes of production – as
yet unmined – onto the futures market. Well over 135% of an entire
year's output, that "hedging" made short-term sense during
gold's 20-year bear market. It funded production and locked in fixed
prices for future gold output. But it also helped drive prices lower.
What De-Hedging Did to the Gold Price in '06
Now that
investors have taken control and trebled the gold price versus the US
dollar, the mining companies are desperate to buy back their forward
sales. Between April and June last year, gold mining companies led by
Barrick and AngloGold Ashanti dehedged by 158 tonnes. That helped drive
the gold price up to its huge spike above $720 per ounce in mid-May '06.
“The rate of dehedging was bound to slow afterwards," says Edel
Tully, head of precious metals research at Mitsui.
But the latest data – for June to September – show that "global
mining companies remain committed to reducing their hedge commitments
and have very little appetite for new hedging."
In other words, the pace of de-hedging will likely slow in 2007. That
should ease the risk of short, sharp spikes such as we saw last spring
– and lower volatility can only help physical gold demand from Asian
consumer-investors. But what about the other major source of gold supply
– sales of gold by Western central bankers...?
Well,
European central banks sold only 396 tonnes of gold last year, against
an agreed limit of 500 tonnes. Emerging economy governments, meanwhile,
are buying gold for their central bank reserves. The details are secret,
but analysts guess that Russia bought 8.7 tonnes of gold between August
and October, while Middle Eastern governments, flush with petro-dollars,
may have bought 100 tonnes in 2006.
Trying to forecast 2007 demand and supply like this, however, misses the
crucial point – why would anyone want to buy gold in the first place?
The Value of Gold in Protecting Against Financial Innovation
The metal is famously useless, with few industrial applications. New
compounds are replacing it in dentistry, and the yellow stuff will never
pay you a dividend. Indeed, gold costs you to own it – in storage and
insurance fees. Add a minimum 2% surcharge from the gold dealers, or the
stockbroking charges should you trade gold ETFs such as Kotak,
StreetTracks or LyxOr, and gold soon looks like a losing trade –
unless the price rises in terms of your local currency. And therein lies
its potential today.
Gold cannot be made at will, no matter how pricey it gets. This is why
people across the world have used it as a store of value for 5,000 years
or more. Gold's utility is simply that it is rare – an attribute of
money that no longer holds for dollars, pounds, euros or yen. Gold is
also the most popular investment in India, remember, the world's second
most populous country. Private demand from the sub-continent accounted
for one ounce in every five sold anywhere in the world last year. But
what do Indian investors think they are getting when they buy gold –
and what might you get from the yellow metal if you buy it today?
Well, gold
acts as "a global currency," says Anthony S.Fell, chairman of
RBC Capital Markets in Toronto – "the only one that is freely
tradable and unencumbered by vast quantities of sovereign debt and prior
obligations." Royal Bank of Canada now trades gold off its currency
desks, rather than viewing it as commodity. If you look at the flood of
paper assets now washing across the world's financial markets, you can
why
A
Barbarous Relic of Debt-Free Simplicity
India's money supply, for example, has surged more than 200 times over
since 1975, helping to knock the value of the rupee down from 8 per US
dollar to 48 per dollar. Here in Britain, the broad money supply is
rising at 14% per year, faster than at any time since 1991 and well
ahead of every other major world currency. But the supply of stock
market securities, bonds and complex derivative products is rising
faster still.
"Financial
innovation in the last few years has been extremely strong and
powerful," says Gilles Gilcenstein, head of asset management at BNP
Paribas. "We've seen that in credit derivatives and equity
derivatives, trackers, certificates..." Financial innovation is now
so rampant, in fact, that derivatives weigh in at $340 trillion
altogether, more than eight times the value of all goods and services
traded in the real global economy last year.
Today's
bubble in novelty and complexity is sure to blow up – if not in 2007,
then all in good time. You might like to hold gold as insurance. For the
"barbarous relic" – so beloved of apparently naive investors
in the booming economies of India, China and the Middle East – is the
ultimate antidote to "financial innovation". Nobody's promise,
gold is also no one's to create.
And while
you're waiting for the mountain of debt and derivatives to explode, you
will own a secure physical asset likely to keep rising in value, thanks
to the simple rules of supply and demand.
Adrian
Ash
BullionVault.com

© 2007
Adrian Ash
Editorial Archive
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Adrian Ash
London, UK
Email l BullionVault.com
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