Record $10 Trillion Paper Gold Trading Market Continues To Depress Price

 | Apr 03, 2017 01:36AM ET

How do you depress the physical gold price? It’s quite easy… you throw $10 trillion paper dollars at it. Not only did global paper gold trading amount reach a new record in 2016, it surpassed the previous year’s total by nearly 50%.

This is simply amazing when we look around at the staggering amount of insanity taking place in the financial markets. With the economic and financial markets sitting at the edge of the cliff, it would seem prudent for investors to curtail their highly leverage bets in the “Paper Gold Casino” and buckle down by purchasing real physical metal.

Unfortunately, the Mainstream media and the Financial networks have totally lobotomized investors by removing the following vocabulary from the mushy substance between their ears….. Wisdom, Prudent, Long-term, Safe-haven and Gold-Silver.

With the advent of twitter, wisdom today comes down to reading no more than ONE SENTENCE. Anything longer than that is a complete waste of time when it is better spent sitting in front of six computer monitors trading digits. Forget about investing one’s money to build up a real company, when it is more stimulating to try and SCALP tiny profits by trading stocks all day fueled by a half dozen monster energy drinks.

This is called progress…… a giant leap forward for mankind and technology.

h3 Global Gold Exchange Notional Trading Amount Hit New $10 Trillion Record In 2016/h3

According to GFMS newly released 2017 Gold Survey, total global exchange notional trading amount reached $9.8 trillion in 2016. This was up 46% from $6.7 trillion in 2015. These figures were based on the total amount of “volume in nominal tonne equivalent” traded on nine exchanges. For example, here are the top four exchanges annual gold traded quoted by GFMS:

  1. COMEX = 179,047 tonnes
  2. SHFE = 34,760 tonnes
  3. SGE = 11,793 tonnes
  4. TOCOM = 8,541 tonnes

The total amount of paper gold traded on the nine exchanges in 2016 equaled 243,000 metric tons versus 180,000 metric tons the previous year. I took these values and multiplied them by the average annual gold price to arrive at the figures below. I also compared these figures to the total amount of physical gold retail investment for each year (source GFMS 2017 Gold Survey):