The precious
metals plunged last week, knifing through key support zones to
unleash an explosion of bearish sentiment. This troubling heavy
selling wasn’t news-driven, it emerged out of the blue. Who was
dumping gold and why? Later data confirmed it was American futures
speculators short selling gold and silver at record levels. Extreme
shorting is very bullish, as these bets soon have to be covered.
The gold and
silver price action has been exceedingly anomalous since early
2013. That’s when the Federal Reserve fomented a melt-up in the
general stock markets, through both monetizing debt and jawboning
implying it was backstopping stock prices. The levitating stock
markets gradually sucked all life away from alternative investments
including gold, which was crushed by epic selling of gold-ETF
shares.
Western investors
all but abandoned gold, leaving it solely at the mercy of American
futures speculators. Their collective buying and selling always
affects the gold price, but its impact is really amplified in this
surreal world of withered investment demand. Since 2013’s extreme
record gold-ETF selling petered out in early 2014, gold and silver
prices have been utterly dominated by trading in the US futures
markets.
Speculating in
gold futures is a super-risky hyper-leveraged game. Last
month the CME Group cut the margin requirements on gold and silver
futures by 7.7% and 8.3%. Now traders only need to keep $6000 in
their account to control a single 100-ounce gold contract, and $8250
for a 5000-ounce silver contract. And at $1250 gold and $19 silver,
these contracts are worth a whopping $125,000 and $95,000
respectively.
Thus a speculator
running minimum margin has maximum leverage of 20.8x in gold
futures and 11.5x in silver futures. This is astoundingly high. In
the stock markets, the Federal Reserve’s Regulation T has legally
limited leverage to just 2.0x since 1974. At 20.8x leverage,
a relatively small 4.8% move in gold futures in the wrong direction
from any speculator’s bet will wipe out 100% of the capital they
risked!
So futures
speculators simply can’t afford to be wrong for long, even if they
aren’t running minimum margin. On Tuesday May 27th, they greatly
expanded their bets that gold and silver prices would just keep
drifting lower. So gold and silver plunged 2.1% and 1.9% that day,
driving the final nail in the sentiment coffin for many
precious-metals bulls. At the time, the source of this heavy
selling wasn’t clear yet.
Futures
speculators can sell PM futures, effectively adding supply and
driving down prices, in two very different ways. They can liquidate
longs, the worst kind of selling. Once traders sell their long gold
and silver futures positions, they have no obligation to return.
They can stay out for a long time, certainly not helping the
precious metals’ prices. So paring longs can sometimes be a very
bearish omen.
Futures
speculators can also short sell PM futures, effectively borrowing
the metals from someone else before dumping them. They hope to
buy back the futures later at lower prices to repay their debts,
pocketing the price drop as profit. But unlike long liquidations,
short selling is very bullish because traders are under a legal
contractual obligation to buy long contracts in the near future
to cover their shorts.
Futures short
selling is guaranteed near-future buying, as every single
contract sold short has to be bought back which adds demand. This
bullish covering occurs soon for two reasons. First, given
the extreme leverage inherent in gold and silver futures,
speculators can’t risk being heavily short for too long. Second,
futures contracts have built-in expiration dates. They have to be
covered before those.
Thankfully the
serious selling that crushed gold and silver last Tuesday was
exclusively American speculators’ heavy futures short selling.
We couldn’t know that until late last Friday afternoon, when the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission released its weekly Commitments
of Traders report on futures positions. Until 3:30pm Friday rolled
around, I was worried last Tuesday was a long liquidation.
American stock
traders, whose
epic GLD-share selling was responsible for gold’s entire plunge
last year, played no role in last Tuesday’s precious-metals
breakdown. That day GLD’s gold-bullion holdings actually surged
higher by 1.1% or 8.4 metric tons. That was their largest daily
build in percentage terms since August 2011, and absolute tonnage
terms since October 2012! Were stock traders buying gold?
I doubt it. The
flagship GLD gold ETF’s mission is to track the gold price.
So if stock traders weren’t selling GLD shares as fast as futures
traders were dumping gold, GLD’s price would have decoupled to the
upside. GLD’s custodians had to add new share supply to keep
its price falling fast enough to keep pace with gold. So they
issued new shares, and used the proceeds to buy more physical gold
bullion.
Since GLD didn’t
experience differential selling that breakdown day, American futures
speculators had to be the culprit. And Friday’s CoT proved they
were, on the short side. This first chart looks at the GLD
price superimposed over speculators’ weekly total long and short
positions in gold futures, taken from those CoT reports. When I saw
this latest CoT data last Friday, my eyes nearly popped out of my
skull.
In that CoT week
ending on Tuesday May 27th, the day gold and silver plunged,
American futures speculators sold short an astounding 30.5k gold
contracts! This is a staggering number, the equivalent of 94.8t
of gold dumped onto the markets in a single week. Global investment
demand, which the World Gold Council says averaged 30.2t per week
in 2012 and 14.9t last year, simply couldn’t absorb this burst of
supply.
You can see the
sharp jump above in the red line, speculators’ total gold-futures
shorts. I couldn’t ever remember such a massive shorting spree, so
I checked the CoT data back to 1999. In that entire 15.4-year span,
encompassing the end of the last secular bear and this entire
secular bull, this was the biggest weekly jump in spec gold-futures
shorting ever! It may even be an all-time record, it was
that extreme.
In fact, there
were only two other times since 1999 when specs’ gold-futures shorts
soared more than 25k contracts in a single week. Both were last
year, in mid-February and mid-November. During those smaller
episodes of extreme shorting (30.1k and 27.9k contracts), gold
prices plunged by 2.8% and 3.3% in those CoT weeks. Yet this metal
merely slipped by 2.3% in this latest new record CoT week.
The fact that
extreme futures shorting is having a diminishing impact on
the gold price was a pleasant surprise. Given the universal
hyper-bearishness plaguing gold these days, and the total
abandonment of it by Western investors, you’d think a record
shorting assault by futures speculators would ignite a crash-like
plummet. But instead gold only retreated around 2%, not a big move
even right near lows.
Why? Gold has
spent this past year bottoming and basing. It first hit
$1200 late last June, and hasn’t traded much lower ever since
despite facing the roaring headwinds of the Fed’s ongoing
stock-market levitation. You can see that bottoming and basing
above clearly in GLD share prices. And each time gold refuses to
break to major new lows, fewer American futures speculators are
willing to short it again.
Their total gold
shorts hit a record 178.9k contracts back in early July after those
initial gold lows. And that massive short ramp hammered gold
and GLD prices. In fact, over the entire past year the
single most important and dominant driver of GLD has been American
speculators’ gold-futures short selling and subsequent covering.
There’s been a nearly-perfect inverse correlation between
their total shorts and GLD prices!
So if you want to
know where gold and GLD are going, you have to watch the
speculators’ shorting. They covered aggressively after their
extreme bets last July didn’t pan out, driving gold sharply higher.
Then they started ramping their shorts again late last year to
150.0k contracts in anticipation of the Fed starting to taper its
QE3
bond-monetization campaign. They figured both QE3 and the end
of QE3 were bearish for gold!
Yet that bet was
again spectacularly wrong, so they soon had to cover again which
drove the sharp early-2014 rally in gold and GLD shares. Despite
all their sophistication, as a herd American futures speculators’
bets on gold are a
powerful
contrarian indicator. Right exactly when they are most bearish,
having the largest total short positions and lowest total longs,
gold is on the verge of major new uplegs.
This latest record
surge in specs’ gold-futures shorts last week merely boosted their
total up to 121.4k contracts, far below the last two peaks. If gold
soon rallies sharply from here, which it certainly ought to given
these huge new short positions that have to soon be covered,
these peaks in spec shorts form a major downtrend. Each time gold
drifts to lows, fewer and fewer speculators are willing to bet
against it.
And that makes
sense, as gold has stabilized in this past year despite enormous
ongoing GLD
holdings liquidations in the second half of 2013. That means
there are big buyers out there absorbing this supply, Eastern
investors. While Americans foolishly like to sell low and buy high,
hating cheap gold and loving the
dangerously
overvalued stock markets right now, Asians play this game the
opposite smart way.
Interestingly not
all American futures speculators are blinded by groupthink and the
herd mentality. A majority of traders have been gradually adding to
their long-side gold-futures positions all year, shown above by the
green line. In fact when their peers were selling short 30.5k
gold-futures contracts last week, they actually added 3.1k long-side
ones. This was serious contrarian buying given gold’s plunge!
With the legions
of bearish futures speculators failing on three major occasions over
the past year to push gold to new lows, I suspect their zeal to
short this beaten-down loathed metal is going to soon evaporate.
And once they start covering, their buying feeds on itself. The
more gold-futures contracts bought to cover existing shorts, the
faster the gold price rises and the more it pressures other traders
to cover shorts too.
And even with
specs’ total shorts now nowhere near last July’s record, there is
still an utterly huge amount of short covering left to do. During
the normal years of 2009 to 2012 before last year’s extreme gold
anomaly, American speculators’ total gold-futures shorts averaged
just 65.4k contracts. Merely to mean revert from here, they’d have
to buy to cover 56.0k contracts which is the equivalent of
174.2 tonnes of gold!
And mean
reversions out of extremes rarely stop at averages, they usually
overshoot in the opposite direction. So we’re likely to see specs’
total shorts well under 50k contracts after this coming short
covering has run its course. On top of that, specs’ total
gold-futures longs at 200.0k contracts remain far below their 288.5k
average between 2009 to 2012. A mean reversion there represents
another 275.2t of gold buying.
So as American
gold-futures speculators unwind and mean revert their extreme
bearish bets on gold over the coming year or so, we are looking at a
staggering 449.4t of buying from them alone. This isn’t far below
2013’s epic record GLD liquidation of 552.6t, which was responsible
for nearly 6/7ths of the total drop in global gold demand
that hammered its price 27.9% lower last year. Huge gains are
coming.
And once gold’s
mean reversion gets underway decisively from this speculator futures
buying, other investors will pile in. We’ll see big differential
buying pressure on GLD shares from American stock traders as they
seek to redeploy in gold, and surging Western physical demand.
Major gold uplegs start with futures short covering, continue
growing on futures long buying, and then accelerate when real
investors return.
With gold low and
basing this past year, silver has fared worse in some ways.
Super-volatile silver is kind of like a gold sentiment gauge.
Speculators and investors only get interested in buying it again
once gold is already rallying,
gold drives
silver. And this same CoT chart substituting spec
silver-futures positions and the flagship SLV silver ETF’s price
highlights even more extreme futures shorting last week.
Last week as gold
plunged on futures short selling, speculators also dumped silver.
The resulting 6.4k-contract jump in traders’ total silver short
contracts was really big, but not a record. It was still quite rare
though, as 6k+ contract weekly leaps in spec shorts have only been
seen in 34 of the 804 CoT weeks since the beginning of 1999. And
nearly half of these occurred before the late 2001 birth of silver’s
secular bull.
But the actual
total level of American speculators’ silver-futures shorts did surge
to a new record last week of 58.2k contracts! This is at least a
15.4-year high, since early 1999 if not all-time. This trounced the
last record of 54.3k in early December 2013. The implications of
these epic shorts are even more profound for silver than they are
for gold, with the potential to launch a moonshot in this hated
metal.
Much like gold,
silver has bottomed and based over this past year. But unlike
gold-futures speculators, silver-futures speculators have continued
to press their outsized bearish bets. The peaks of their shorting
are actually still rising, leaving them extremely exposed to
a sharp rally in this traditionally super-volatile metal. When gold
starts running, silver will follow. And the rush to cover will be
savage.
Between 2009 and
2012, total spec silver-futures shorts averaged 21.5k contracts.
Merely to mean revert to those levels will require traders to buy
back 36.7k shorts, the equivalent of 183.5m ounces of silver! This
is an enormous amount. According to the Silver Institute, 2013
global mine production averaged 68.3m ounces per month. We are
talking about short covering equivalent to nearly 3 months of
world mining!
And this silver
short covering will likely happen fast, over less than a month. Not
only is silver prone to big and fast rallies when gold runs, but
silver futures are highly leveraged making shorting extremely risky
when silver rallies. So with American speculators’ silver-futures
shorts again at record highs, I still believe a massive
silver short
squeeze is coming. Futures shorts always have to soon be
repurchased.
It’s provocative
that silver didn’t plunge far in response to last week’s record spec
shorts, a sign that there is big buying out there absorbing this
burst of supply. Much of this is for physical bullion, where global
demand surged to a record high last year despite the wretched
prices. But some is futures buying, where contrarian futures
traders have been
steadily adding to their long silver-futures holdings all year.
So despite the
universal bearishness that flared up in response to last week’s
heavy gold and silver selling, it was the best kind of selling. It
wasn’t dreaded long liquidations, as long-side bets continued to
rise in both gold and silver (also up 3.0k contracts). It was
extreme short selling, positions that have to soon be bought
back to repay those debts. Extreme futures short positions are very
bullish omens.
When the great
majority of futures speculators have crowded onto one side of a
trade, they are always wrong. They are the most bullish,
with high total longs and low total shorts, right when prices are
topping after long runs higher. And they are the most bearish, with
low total longs and high total shorts, right when a price is
bottoming before turning higher again. The latter describes gold
and silver perfectly today.
With gold-futures
and silver-futures shorts just hitting their own records, it
virtually guarantees a frenzy of short covering is nearing. Short
covering feeds on itself, driving accelerating rallies that propel
gold and silver (and therefore GLD and SLV) higher. Are you ready
for this? Do you have the courage to make a contrarian bet, to buy
low when others are afraid? Or do you sell low and buy high like
Wall Street?
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The bottom line is
gold and silver plunged last week because American futures
speculators doubled down on their extreme bearish bets. They
succumbed to today’s universal herd mentality that foolishly
believes gold and silver prices fall forever while stock markets
rise forever. So they added record levels of gold-futures shorts,
and took silver-futures shorts to record levels. This bet has
failed for an entire year!
Extreme futures
short positions have to soon be covered, and the resulting buying
feeds on itself and can spawn stunning short squeezes that catapult
prices higher. As traders inevitably soon start to unwind these
bets by buying to cover, gold and silver prices are going to surge.
There is nothing more bullish than extreme leveraged shorts, as
these excessively bearish traders soon become frantic forced buyers.
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