Commentaries

Silver outperforming

7th February, 2014
Precious metals Market report by Alasdair Macleod, GoldMoney, Head of Research
___________________________________________________________________
Since Monday financial markets have consolidated following the emerging market currency shocks of the previous week. Safe-haven bonds were strong initially, before tailing off yesterday. Equities started the week badly but steadied yesterday, and gold spiked at $1274 on Wednesday before being knocked back $20 subsequently. The result is gold was more or less unchanged on the week by last night, though early indications London time are for better prices today.
The event traders are waiting for is the unemployment numbers at 08:30 New York time (13:30 GMT). These may be bolstered by the temporary improvement in the weather for the period concerned; and because 1.3 million lost their benefits on 1st January, the statistical treatment of these unfortunates could be a major factor.
What the Fed will make of these figures is perhaps more important to markets than the numbers themselves. If the Fed appears to take them as more evidence of economic recovery, we can expect more tapering, which will risk undermining confidence in minor currencies. If not they may get a temporary respite.
This will be crucial for all markets in the coming weeks. Relationships between precious metals and other markets seem to be changing, with established market trends being broken. Unusually, both gold and the dollar have been strong at the same time, which must have hurt some of the hedge funds. Strongest of all has been the yen, as carry trades have been unwound in all the uncertainty. Borrowing low-cost yen to buy high-yielding securities has been common practice and these trades have come unstuck, hence the short-covering of yen.
Silver outperformed gold this week, having risen about 5% from $19.05 to last night’s close at about $20. Intra-day movements have been the result of market-makers trying to work the price lower, because they are net short, and being squeezed by lack of genuine selling. This is illustrated in the chart below of silver’s price and open interest on Comex.
When the price was falling from mid-January, open interest was rising. Looking at the underlying Commitment of Traders statistics we learn that Producers and Merchants (i.e. miners, processors and industrial buyers) were net buyers of about 1,700 contracts, while Managed Money (mostly hedge funds) cut their longs and increased their shorts. Much of the increase in open interest has been through swap positions, which being only one end of a trade cannot be read with any certainty.
Overall, this confounds the argument that mines and processors should use the market to hedge forward, particularly when the bullion banks tell them prices are at risk of falling, which is broadly their message today. This would have allowed market-makers to close their shorts, reducing open interest.
Instead, much of future production is already committed forward through off-market long-term contracts with just a few of the major bullion banks. Put another way, forward production has already been absorbed, which is why the Producers and Merchants category are not sellers.
The Managed Money category (hedge funds) is just about the only liquidity in the market, and it still has an unusually large short position. This is not news to other categories of trader, which is why the smart money is adding to long positions and open interest has been rising.
Next week’s statistics
Monday. Japan: Consumer Confidence, Economy Watchers Survey. Eurozone: Sentix Indicator
Tuesday. US: Wholesale Inventories. Japan: Key Machinery Orders, M2 Money Supply.
Wednesday. Eurozone: Industrial Production. US: Budget Deficit.
Thursday. US: Initial Claims, Retail Sales, Business Inventories.
Friday. Eurozone: GDP, Trade Balance. US: Import Price Index, Capacity utilisation, industrial Production.

Ends
NOTES TO EDITOR
For more information, and to arrange interviews, please call Gwyn Garfield-Bennett on 01534 715411, or email gwyn@directinput.je
GoldMoney is one of the world’s leading providers of physical gold, silver, platinum and palladium for retail and corporate customers. Customers can trade and store precious metal online easily and securely, 24 hours a day.
GoldMoney has offices in London, Jersey and Hong Kong. It offers its customers storage facilities in Canada, Hong Kong, Singapore, Switzerland and the UK provided by the leading non-bank vault operators Brink’s, Via Mat, Malca-Amit, G4S and Rhenus Logistics.
Historically gold has been an excellent way to preserve purchasing power over long periods of time. For example, today it takes almost the same amount of gold to buy a barrel of crude oil as it did 60 years ago which is in stark contrast to the price of oil in terms of national currencies such as the US dollar.
GoldMoney is regulated by the Jersey Financial Services Commission and complies with Jersey’s anti-money laundering laws and regulations. GoldMoney has established industry-leading governance policies and procedures to protect customers’ assets with independent audit reporting every 3 months by two leading audit firms.
Visit www.goldmoney.com.