Long-Short Position Means For Gold

 | Dec 15, 2014 05:58AM ET

[This article was featured earlier this year in the Gold Forecaster& Silver Forecaster.]

In the context of the gold price, many relate the net long/short position in the US dollar as an influence on the gold price. To a small extent this may be true, but not, in our opinion, to an extent that actually affects the gold price.

Normal use

A short/long position on COMEX for instance can be used in a multitude of major and minor transactions to hedge the original $ positions so as to remove the risk of an exchange rate change a policy that has nothing to do with the future exchange rate of the dollar against any currency or against the move of gold against the dollar. A much smaller but considerably more active market is that involving speculators and traders who do view the potential for a change in the exchange rate of the dollar against any currency. It is this market that influences day-to-day prices, but not in a way that commentators often think. COMEX is a financial market where as much as 95% of all contracts are closed out before the contract matures.

Turning to the real net long/short positions in the dollar, this number includes all those where delivery will not take place as well as those that do. This muddies the water somewhat and reduce this figure to one defining expectations, not necessarily realities.

Change in expectations?

The section of this market defined as the Commercial positions reflect those positions that are conducted by the more savvy professional investors. As the dollar turned higher in recent weeks, these investors closed more and more short positions that would have cost them dearly as the dollar rose against all currencies. The expectations were that the dollar was set to rise and continue to rise, justifying long positions, not short, in the dollar.