What You Need To Know About Physical Gold Supply And Demand
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What You Need To Know About Physical Gold Supply And Demand
Much of the confusion regarding the gold price has to do with gold's dual nature, being both a currency and a commodity. This confusion is removed when you realize that in terms of supply and demand dynamics gold trades more like a currency than a commodity.
The major difference between gold and perishable commodities is their stock-to-flow ratios, measured by the above ground stock divided by annual production. Gold has a very high stock-to-flow ratio, while commodities like wheat have a low stock-to-flow ratio.
Thousands of years ago people started using gold as money, because gold is immutable, easily divisible, and scarce. Gold is the most marketable commodity. Its long tradition as store of value means extremely little gold has been wasted over history. The vast majority of all the gold ever mined is still with us. Consequently, annual mine production adds about 1.7% to the above ground stock of gold.
Most above ground gold is held for monetary purposes. Jewelry is a store of value combined with esthetics and status.
At the time of writing the total above ground stock of gold is 205,000 tonnes and global mine output in 2021 accounted for 3,560 tonnes. The stock-to-flow ratio (STFR) is currently 58 (205,000 / 3,560). Gold's high STFR and the fact that most above ground gold is held for monetary purposes is what makes it trade like a currency.
Stock-to-Flow Ratio Comparison
Soft Commodity Supply and Demand Basics
Based on data from the World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE), the STFR in the wheat market is 0.35 (278 million tonnes in stock divided by 776 million tonnes of production). A low STFR causes the price of wheat mainly to be determined by what is annually produced versus what is used up. Existing stocks can only smooth a surplus or deficit in the market—calculated as production minus consumption—to a certain extent.
Wheat stored in a warehouse starts to rot after several years, so a surplus can't be entirely absorbed as stock: it must be sold, which lowers the price. Market deficits, in turn, can't be fully drawn from stock supply, and thus increase the price. In addition, because wheat's sole application is consumption, for which fixed quantities are needed, the price is set between what is produced versus consumed.
Traditional Supply and Demand
For commodities like wheat, 85% of the time since 1974, a surplus caused prices to decline and a deficit caused prices to increase. This traditional supply and demand relationship works because wheat gets consumed and has limited storage life.
Gold Supply and Demand Dynamics
The gold market is very different. Because gold isn't be used up and is primarily used as a store of value, the gold price isn't set between what is produced and consumed.
Due to its high STFR, gold supply mainly consists of inventory. And because virtually everyone buys gold as a store of value, demand consists mainly of inventory as well. The gold market can be seen as all sorts of trades moving metal from one inventory to another (with or without metal being altered in shape, weight or purity). Or the gold stays in the same vault but changes ownership.
Additionally, gold's use for monetary purposes doesn't require fixed quantities. People don't buy gold because they need, for example, five troy ounces to build a house. What they need is "whatever amount of gold" in exchange for how much value they like to invest at the prevailing price.
The gold price can be too low or too high, but there can't be a surplus or deficit. This is what makes gold trade more like a currency than a commodity.
Understanding Gold Investment Demand
When you buy gold as an investment, you're participating in a global currency market, not a traditional commodity market. The amount you purchase depends on your investment goals and the current price, not fixed consumption needs.
Measuring distinct types of demand, which are simply fragments of total trading volume, can help us gauge the sentiment of specific groups of buyers. But it's senseless to compare it to annual production. Some consultancy firms, though, do exactly that: publish a gold market balance.
How come the confusion in the gold market?
After the gold standard was abandoned in 1971, the U.S. tried to "demonetize" gold by pushing a narrative that gold is useless, in order to make the dollar to look stronger. Although most central banks held on to their gold, and thus didn't demonetize it, some people in the West stopped viewing gold as a currency, but purely as a commodity.
In the 1980s, consultancy firms like Gold Fields Mineral Services (GFMS) began publishing reports about gold supply and demand. These reports later included a market balance, supposedly indicating if the price of gold would rise or fall. In other words, they present gold as if it is a perishable commodity that can be in surplus or deficit.
Millions of gold investors have been confused by these reports, thinking that the price of gold is determined by the difference between annual mine production versus newly fabricated products. The latter is what consultancy firms chiefly report as demand.
Worse than flipping a coin!
From 1982 until 2020 only 44% of the time a "surplus" or "deficit" in the gold market was positively correlated to the direction of the gold price. Flipping a coin would get a better result—50%. This disappointing score is explained by the fact that gold is a currency and currencies can't be in a surplus or deficit.
Moreover, according to GFMS the largest demand category is jewelry demand. Viewed in a chart, though, it shows that jewelry demand moves in the opposite direction of the gold price. Jewelry buyers are price sensitive; they do not drive the price.
Institutional Supply and Demand Drives the Gold Price
If an investment fund buys an allocated 400-ounce gold bar from a bank in London, this trade doesn't show up in supply and demand data published by GFMS. Yet, it has the exact same impact on the gold price as the sale of 400 newly minted coins weighing 1 troy ounce.
As 400-ounce bars are traded in massive volumes all day long in the London and Swiss wholesale bullion markets, that's where the price is set. Fifteen out of the past seventeen years the net flow of gold (import minus export) through the UK has been positively correlated to the price of gold. That's not a coincidence. Institutional supply and demand in above ground gold drives the price.
The reason why net import and net export in London is often correlated to the gold price is because usually "the East" takes the other side of the trades in the West. If Western institutional investors buy gold, driving up the price, countries in Asia will sell and metal flows from the East into London vaults.
Derivates markets are connected to the London Bullion Market (the most liquid spot market) through arbitrage. The forces from the COMEX futures market in New York are executed on physical supply and demand in London.
Academic Research Confirms
From Fergal O'Connor, Lecturer In Finance at Cork University Business School: "The [high stock to flow ratio] of gold implies low market power of gold mining firms and thus an inability to significantly influence gold prices... [Mine] production thus follows gold prices." Gold miners are price takers, not price setters.
Annual mine output reacts to the gold price, not the other way around. When there is a bull market, new mining projects are initiated. Ten years later these mines start producing and elevate total mine output. Of course, in the long run mine supply does influence the gold price, as it increases the above ground stock over time.
An accurate gold supply and demand overview would cover global physical gold trading volume, but it wouldn't include a net balance. After all, for every buyer there is a seller. There can't be a surplus or deficit as with soft commodities. That is not to say that all GFMS data is meaningless; much valuable information can be extracted from it. My main objection is their "market balance" approach.