Bullion funds lose another $6bn

Gold bars and granules. File photo: Reuters

Gold bars and granules. File photo: Reuters

Published Aug 3, 2015

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Toronto - Speculators keep punishing gold.

Money managers stayed net-short on bullion for a second week, after going bearish for the first time since the US government data began in 2006. The value of exchange-traded products tracking gold slumped $6 billion last month, the most since September, data compiled by Bloomberg shows.

With prices stuck near a five-year low, traders are turning their back on gold amid muted inflation and a resilient US economy. Since about 40 percent of what’s mined or recycled annually gets sold as coins or bars, shriveling demand from speculators could mean a prolonged bear market. Morgan Stanley says investment buying will keep dropping through at least 2018.

“Increasingly, you’re seeing that other than ardent gold bugs, very few people are on the gold bandwagon,” said John Stephenson, the chief executive officer of Toronto-based Stephenson & Co Capital Management, which oversees C$45 million ($34 million). “You’ve lost the generalist investment audience, and I think that’s going to be one of the things that’s hard for gold to overcome, at least in the short-run.”

July plunge

Futures fell 6.5 percent in July to $1,095.10 an ounce on the Comex, the biggest drop since June 2013. Prices touched $1 073.70 on July 24, the lowest since 2010, and traded at $1 094.50 on Monday. The MSCI All-Country World Index of equities gained 0.8 percent last month, while the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 2.3 percent. The Bloomberg Commodity Index dropped 11 percent, the biggest decline since 2011.

Speculators held a net-short position in gold of 11 334 futures and option contracts as of July 28, according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data released three days later. Long holdings dropped for a fifth week, the longest slide since March.

Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News predict prices will drop to $984 before January, the lowest since 2009.

The Federal Reserve signaled last week that US interest rates are likely to rise this year as the labor market improves, while not giving clear guidance on the timing. Higher rates curb the appeal of gold because it doesn’t pay interest or offer returns, unlike competing assets.

Annual slide

Last week’s Fed comments reinforced expectations for a September rate increase and bolstered negative sentiment for bullion, Deutsche Bank wrote in a report Friday. The metal has dropped 7.5 percent this year, on pace for a third annual decline that would mark the longest slump since 1998.

Signs of uneven US growth could prompt the central bank to wait longer before starting to tighten monetary policy, easing the pressure on gold prices. Worker pay in the second quarter climbed at the slowest pace in records going back to 1982, the Labor Department said Friday.

A slowdown in China is also threatening to be a drag on US growth. Gold prices rose 0.8 percent last week, the first advance since June 19. Fed policy makers have meetings in September, October and December scheduled for this year.

“A lot of us feel that the Fed wants to raise rates,” while “global issues” may be delaying an increase, said George Zivic, New-York based portfolio manager at OppenheimerFunds, which oversees $235 billion. “If December comes and goes and they don’t raise rates, then I think you could see a significant move in gold.”

Historic role

Gold has defied its historic role as a haven in recent months. Prices dropped even as Chinese equities posted their worst decline in six years and Greece fought over a debt deal with its creditors.

GoldCorp, the largest North American bullion producer by market value, trimmed its monthly dividend to cope with the price slump. Holdings in global gold ETPs are at a six-year low, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

“We’re back to just gold being what it’s been for hundreds of years, which is sort of a general store of wealth, but not sort of that go-to asset when things look terrible,” said Fiona Boal, the director of commodity research for Fulcrum Asset Management in London, which oversees about $3.6 billion.

“It will continue to be under pressure.”

BLOOMBERG

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