Gold-Futures Buying Yet To Start

 | Feb 26, 2017 03:07AM ET

Gold has powered higher in a strong new upleg since the Fed’s mid-December rate hike. But the core group of traders who usually fuel early-upleg gains has been missing in action in recent months. The gold-futures speculators have not done any meaningful buying since gold bottomed. This anomaly is a very-bullish omen for gold. Since these traders’ buying has yet to start, they need to do lots of catch-up buying.

Since the day after the Fed’s second rate hike in 10.5 years in mid-December, gold has surged 10.0% higher at best as of the middle of this week. Naturally these strong gains were really amplified by the gold miners’ stocks. The leading GDX VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:GDX) blasted 34.6% higher over that same short span, trouncing the broad-market S&P 500’s mere 1.4% gain! The gold sector is really shining.

But nevertheless it’s been a strange gold upleg distorted by the markets’ extreme Trumphoria. Normally new gold uplegs see a distinct three-stage buying pattern that fuels their advances. Gold’s initial gains off lows are driven by futures speculators buying to cover their shorts. The resulting gold reversal and surge entices in still more futures speculators on the long side, which really accelerates gold’s upside.

This early gold-futures buying is essential, single-handedly pushing gold high enough for long enough to reach critical mass psychologically. That finally attracts investors to return, convincing them gold’s new upleg is real and sustainable. They command vastly-larger pools of capital than speculators, and fuel most of gold uplegs’ gains. Futures speculators jump start the gold-driving engine of investment buying.

This gold-upleg buying sequence has proven the standard for so many years now that it’s really hard to imagine it playing out any other way. Speculators and investors have very-different mindsets and risk tolerances, making them uniquely suited to buy at particular times. When gold hits a deep low in extreme bearishness after a major correction, the only buyers are speculators covering shorts to realize profits.

Gold futures actually have a wildly-outsized impact on gold prices, punching way above their weight in capital terms. The main reason is the extreme leverage inherent in futures trading. While the decades-old legal limit for leverage in the stock markets is 2x, it can run as high as 25x in gold-futures trading! So relatively-large amounts of gold can be controlled with relatively-small amounts of capital through futures.

This week, each gold-futures contract of 100 troy ounces only required a small cash margin of $5400 to trade. Yet at $1240 gold, that contract was worth $124,000. Thus fully-margined futures speculators can run leverage as high as 23.0x! Every dollar they bet on gold has up to 23x the impact of another dollar used by investors to buy gold outright. So futures trading can overpower investing to wag the gold-price dog.

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On top of the disproportional influence of leveraged capital in gold-futures trading, the gold price derived from it is the world’s reference price. So big gold moves driven by hyper-leveraged futures trading can greatly affect gold sentiment universally, leading other traders to follow the lead of futures speculators. Gold-futures trading utterly dominates short-term gold psychology, which is very frustrating for investors.

So to see gold reverse sharply higher since mid-December without any significant gold-futures buying at all is an incredible anomaly. A strong new upleg in gold igniting despite an effective boycott by the futures speculators ought to be impossible based on past precedent. Yet that’s exactly what we’ve seen over the past couple months! These extreme Trumphoria-distorted markets since the election continue to amaze.

Every week speculators’ total long and short gold-futures positions are published in the CFTC’s famous Commitments of Traders reports. They are released late Friday afternoons, but current to the preceding Tuesday closes. The latest CoT data available prior to this essay’s publishing ran to February 14th. And it almost miraculously reveals gold has enjoyed no meaningful gold-futures buying at all by speculators!

This chart is simple, with speculators’ total gold-futures long contracts rendered in green and their total short contracts in red. That CoT data is only available at a weekly resolution. Gold is superimposed over the top in blue, along with its key moving averages. For many years, gold-futures buying and selling by speculators has been the dominant driver of short-term gold price action. Until the past couple months’ anomaly.