Why ECB QE Is Bearish For Gold

 | Sep 15, 2014 03:47PM ET

The recent action by the ECB appears to have caught many gold bulls off guard. A common interpretation of the impact that a potential quantitative easing program would have on Gold prices was that it would be very bullish. This argument was based on the concept that money printing is bullish for gold, and that QE1 and QE2 by the Fed triggered major rallies in the yellow metal. Whilst we do not dispute that QE1 and QE2 by the Fed were indeed bullish for gold, we strongly disagreed that the ECB would introduce a program that would spark a major rally. In fact we went further, predicting that what the ECB was going to do was in fact highly bearish for gold, and in this article we will endeavour to explain why.

The Devil is in the Detail

There are some key concepts to understand about what the ECB is doing and how that differs from the generic QE programs implemented by the Fed and other central banks. Whilst the Fed’s QE programs led us to the view that gold prices were heading higher during the years 2009-2011, there are seemingly minor but actually crucial differences in the ECB’s QE led us to reaffirm our view that gold prices were heading south.

When the Fed first implemented QE their goal was to stimulate the economy by keeping long term interest rates low and injecting cash into the financial system. The Fed targeted buying long-term Treasuries (US Government debt), aiming to push the price of that debt higher and yields lower. This would ensure that longer-term borrowing costs were kept low in order to stimulate the economy.

The ECB is not trying to get long term interest rates lower; these are already at all-time lows. They are not buying government bonds. Instead the ECB is engaged in a program of purchasing Asset Backed Securities (ABS) with the objective of incentivizing banks to lend.

An ABS is a financial security backed by a loan, lease or receivables against assets other than real estate and mortgage-backed securities. For investors, asset backed securities are an alternative to investing in corporate debt. They are similar to the Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) that the Fed began purchasing with QE3. Just as the Fed bought MBS with the aim of stimulating lending in the housing market, the ECB is attempting to target corporate lending by purchasing ABS.

ECB QE is More Like The Fed’s QE3 Program

As one will recall, QE3 by the Fed was actually very bearish for gold. This sounds counter-intuitive, and it is somewhat, particularly given a backdrop where pumping money into the system had been bullish for gold. Although QE3 had been put under the same banner as the previous two programs, the change in its detail actually had the reverse impact on gold prices. We recognised this subtle difference and the vastly different implication it had. This resulted in us aggressively shorting gold and gold mining stocks through 2013 and largely contributed to our 92% return during that year.

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