Shaky economic news, negative interest rates, and stock market turmoil have helped drive the recent gold rally, but an even more fundamental principle underlies the yellow metal’s surge – simple supply and demand.
As a recent CNBC report put it:
Consumers are lapping up gold at a time supply is declining, helping underpin a rally in the precious metal.”
While China’s central bank continues to buy gold, adding another 0.6% to its holdings in February, the Chinese people are also pulling money out of stocks and investing it in gold, according to Padraig Seif, chief executive of Hong Kong-based trading firm, Finemetal Asia.
But it’s not just investors in traditional markets like China and India that are buying gold. According to the CNBC report, demand is surging in emerging markets as well:
Demand from emerging markets in particular is strong as currencies such as the Indonesian rupiah, the Malaysian ringgit and the Vietnamese dong has fallen sharply in the last 12 to 18 months against the US dollar, prompting consumers in these markets to buy physical gold, which is seen as a haven in times of tumult.”
We see see more evidence of a reobust appetite for gold in the continued demand for bullion coins. After selling out of American Gold Eagles at the end of 2015, the US Mint reported brisk sales as 2016 got underway. In January, the mint sold 124,000 ounces of Gold Eagles compared with just 81,000 ounces in the first month of 2015. It was the highest January sales level since 2013.
In fact, demand for gold is so strong the world’s largest asset manager recently had to temporarily suspend the creation of new shares of its gold ETF due to the demand for the physical metal.
On the other side of the equation, surging demand is happening in an environment of shrinking supply. According to the World Gold Council, total supply declined 4% in 2015 to 4,258 tons. That represents the lowest level since 2009.