The past week in metals has been one for the record books. Silver
dropped by 34 percent in a matter of days, its sharpest drop in 30
years. Gold meanwhile corrected by 20 percent from its peak, which has
only happened twice before during the last decade. Copper corrected by
one third from the February high as hedge funds reversed their positions
into shorts for the first time in more than two years.
The reasons behind the sell-off are numerous: risk adversity, a
scramble to realise cash to cover loss-making positions elsewhere,
economic slowdown reducing demand for industrial metals and not least
another margin hike by CME, the world’s largest futures exchange. Added
to this there has been market talk about heavy selling by Chinese
investors. They have been focusing on the strength of their domestic
economies and have been caught out by the slowdown elsewhere.
Since early August gold volatility has been stubbornly high
indicating increased uncertainty about the future direction. Up until
and following September 6, when a new record high at 1,921 was reached,
professional investors had begun to reduce exposure despite global stock
markets going into reverse. Several 100 dollar corrections during the
last month added to the unease among investors who had been viewing gold
as the ultimate safe haven asset.
The rout happened last Friday as rumours about an imminent CME margin
hike on the gold futures contract pushed it below 1,700, only to
accelerate Monday when Far Eastern investors could react to the new
situation. Silver extended the sell-off that began in early May and gold
reached but did not breach the line in the sand being represented by
its 200-day moving average.
In our article “Heads up! Gold futures margin could be raised again”
from August we argued that the ongoing volatility and daily price
swings probably warranted another hike to between 8,200 and 9,000
dollars per contract. On Friday the margin for holding a gold futures
contract was raised to 8,500 which means an investor at the current gold
price needs to pay 5.2 percent of the contract value to maintain a
position.
Such a margin is historically relatively high and unless we see a
further escalation this should probably be enough for now. Technically
gold held and bounced strongly of its 200-day moving average, currently
at 1,530, and this has returned some of the confidence that was lost
during the rout. The arguments for holding gold have if anything
strengthened during August so once this nervousness subsides gold could
shine once again.
What are the risks from here? It took 18 months to reclaim a new high
during the previous two major corrections in 2006 and 2008; investor
redemptions from exchange traded funds (ETF) have so far been very
limited and as such carry the risk of further selling should that type
of investor decide to scale back as well. Lastly and probably most
importantly we need to see volatility reduced as excessive volatility
poses the biggest risk to gold’s safe haven appeal.
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