Gold “Relatively Cheap” Compared to Other Assets: TD Securities Head

From Birch Gold Group

Gold Price Relatively Cheap: TD Ameritrade

This week, Your News to Know rounds up the latest top stories involving gold and the overall economy. Stories include: Expert says gold is still at bargain price, how Basel 3 could boost gold and silver prices, and what’s next after gold’s breakout.

TD Securities: Gold is “relatively cheap” compared to what could come

On May 20th, TD Securities’ head of global strategy Richard Kelly reviewed gold’s current price ($1887) compared to currencies in the current economic outlook. As Kelly noted, gold had quite a pullback from its $2,070 August high, falling to as low as $1,650 at certain points but mostly sticking to the $1,800 level.

Kelly believes this pullback might have frightened investors away from gold despite the metal’s tailwinds remaining in place:

Gold had a phenomenal run-up over the course of last year, and when that reversed, I think it scared a few investors off.

As he explains, the downwards pressure came along with a sudden rise in Treasury yields, one that seems to have caused investors to overlook the true state of the bond market. Optimism came quick as traders started believing that the Federal Reserve might start hiking interest rates as well as reining in its ultra-loose monetary policy in order to head off inflation.

Yet the Fed has consistently promised there’s no intention to start raising interest rates any time soon. Kelly himself believes that many of the top currencies, including the U.S. dollar as well as the euro, are showing undeserved strength (despite the dollar’s recent weakness). This is supported by the sheer scope of monetary supply expansion that has occurred over the past year.

Keeping this in mind, Kelly thinks investors should still see gold as a bargain trade even as it inches closer towards $1,900. He also was quick to point out that a higher dollar-denominated gold price can come from an often-overlooked cause:

Since gold is typically priced in dollars, any fall in the greenback could lead to higher gold prices.

This is an important concept: higher gold prices might result from typical economic pressures like increased demand. Or gold’s price can rise when the dollar falls. (In other words, a person seems taller when measured with a shrinking yardstick.)

According to Kelly, gold has plenty of room for gains above that level due to inflationary risks and many other favorable factors that have supported gold’s price and investor demand.

The Basel 3 accord, gold and silver prices

It’s fairly well-known that if all of the customers showed up at any one bank’s doorstep and requested all of their cash to be withdrawn at the same time, the bank’s doors would be locked within minutes. Yet, as Numismatic News’ Patrick A. Heller notes, many aren’t familiar that the exact same thing is happening regarding banks’ storage of precious metals under the Bank of International Settlements Basel 3 accord.

Many of the world’s largest banks are active traders in precious metals markets, as are their customers. Customers can either opt to store their precious metals in allocated or unallocated storage.

“Allocated” precious metals mean the customer is the owner of record of specific, separately-stored coins and bars. Weight, purity, serial numbers, brand name: all relevant identifying information is recorded. When the customer withdraws metals or sells these assets, the bank releases the exact same assets. They’re customer property. The bank doesn’t own them, and more importantly, they aren’t listed as bank assets or as liabilities.

“Unallocated” precious metals are completely different.

In unallocated storage, a bank’s customer does not own any specifically-identified items. Instead, the customer is, in Heller’s words, “an unsecured creditor of the bank, who has a claim against some of the assets owned by the bank.” If you have, say, 1,000 oz of silver in unallocated storage with a bank, that means the bank has on its books a liability to you for the market value of 1,000 oz of silver. That balances the physical silver, which the bank owns and lists as an asset.

Now, for traders, unallocated storage is convenient. It saves the banks a load of paperwork and legwork shuffling bars and coins from one shelf to another. And since on any given day only a small percentage of a bank’s precious metals are actually transacted, most banks engage in “fractional precious metals trading.” Just like fractional reserve banking, this means the physical precious metals the bank holds are vastly outweighed by “unallocated” precious metals, which are really just a liability to customers that banks cover by purchasing options or other paper forms of precious metals.

Perhaps you can see the problems here… Or, let’s allow Heller to point out the concerns:

How huge is this paper market, where banks may hold paper contracts to cover their liabilities to deliver physical precious metals? In a Commodity Futures Trading Commission hearing in March 2010, precious metals consultant Jeffrey Christian testified that these institutions may have sold their physical metals as much as 100 times the quantity of metal that they actually owned. Obviously, if all these owners contacted their bank to take delivery, the paper market would crash. [emphasis added]

Heller thinks unallocated storage trading of precious metals is the primary suppressor of precious metals prices. For example, the London Bullion Market Association trades $20 billion of gold daily and $5 trillion annually. But there are no dump trucks full of ingots pulling in and out of the LBMA facility. There are no heavily-guarded trains steaming to a secure LBMA warehouse, boxcars stuffed with the day’s $20 billion in gold bars for the marketplace. Because the trading happens in “unallocated” gold, the metal itself might not exist.

After the Great Recession, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision drafted the Basel 3 accord to rein banks in and limit what they can do in pursuit of profits. Yet despite having been drafted in 2008, its 2013-2015 implementation date was pushed to the start of 2023, although some changes are to take effect as of June 1.

Here’s the problematic change: banks would no longer be able to consider liabilities to deliver “unallocated” precious metals as part of their reserves. Which means banks would only be able to trade precious metals they actually physically hold (and not allocated gold or silver — remember, that belongs to the customer).

Interestingly enough, objections came not just from banks but the precious metals sector itself. On May 4, the London Bullion Market Association and the World Gold Council submitted a paper to the Prudential Regulation Authority asking for a change in the Basel 3 accord’s limitations on unallocated precious metals trading.

Heller expects plenty of pushback and revisions moving forward, as a full implementation of the limitations on unallocated storage trading would rightly bring about a banking crisis. For one thing, there’s just not enough gold and silver in the world to account for all the paper precious metals bought and sold. Heller believes that even a gradual implementation of the accord will bring about massive increases in precious metals prices, perhaps even multiply them, over the next 2 years as demand, storage and custody challenges arise in this new era of less-irresponsible banking.

Here’s what could happen next with gold

According to OANDA’s senior market analyst Edward Moya, the recent selloff in the crypto space was just what gold needed to break out of its months-long trading range. As crypto prices fell, investors got a reminder of the crypto market’s volatility and turned to gold as a safe haven and inflation hedge.

While Moya doesn’t question crypto nor deny bitcoin as an inflation hedge, he notes that the drop highlighted gold’s stability over the crypto, and thinks this flight to safety brought gold’s price up nearly $1,900. Moya is bullish on gold’s short, medium and long-term prospects, pointing to a rise in Treasury yields as perhaps the biggest risk gold is facing.

Yet with the Federal Reserve being fairly constrained in its policy options, and willing to let inflation run higher weakening the dollar, Moya sees a fairly clear path ahead for gold.

TD Securities’ head of global strategy Bart Melek also pointed to data reports as something that could end up as a significant mover of prices. Melek said that expectations are already low for the upcoming release of economic data, and that this could ring much louder than anything from the Fed’s minutes.

With global tensions spiking, thousands of Americans are moving their IRA or 401(k) into an IRA backed by physical gold. Now, thanks to a little-known IRS Tax Law, you can too. Learn how with a free info kit on gold from Birch Gold Group. It reveals how physical precious metals can protect your savings, and how to open a Gold IRA. Click here to get your free Info Kit on Gold.

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9 Comments
Calamity
Calamity
May 28, 2021 3:18 pm

As long as the banks are allowed to continue to dump paper contracts anytime the spot price rises it’s not a valuable asset. It doesn’t matter the value of gold throughout history if the market is being heavily manipulated.

Ken31
Ken31
  Calamity
May 28, 2021 5:16 pm

If you ever find yourself needing to sell gold, you probably had bought too much.

DRUD
DRUD
  Calamity
May 28, 2021 6:47 pm

What exactly do you mean by “allowed?” Allowed by Law? Allowed by the general public? Or allowed by reality itself?

TheAssegai
TheAssegai
May 28, 2021 3:22 pm

Gold “Relatively Cheap” Compared to Other Assets

That reminds me of what’s his name saying, “it depends on what the meaning of the word is is”. It depends on what the meaning of the word relatively is. If like the author you think golds value is denominated in dollars, relatively speaking you missed the boat.

From a ZH article.

The United States Mint is committed to providing the best possible online experience to its customers.

The global silver shortage has driven demand for many of our bullion and numismatic products to record heights. This level of demand is felt most acutely by the Mint during the initial product release of numismatic items. Most recently in the pre-order window for 2021 Morgan Dollar with Carson City privy mark (21XC) and New Orleans privy mark (21XD), the extraordinary volume of web traffic caused significant numbers of Mint customers to experience website anomalies that resulted in their inability to complete transactions.

In the interest of properly rectifying the situation, the Mint is postponing the pre-order windows for the remaining 2021 Morgan and Peace silver dollars that were originally scheduled for June 1 (Morgan Dollars struck at Denver (21XG) and San Francisco (21XF)) and June 7 (Morgan Dollar struck at Philadelphia (21XE) and the Peace Dollar (21XH)).

While inconvenient to many, this deliberate delay will give the Mint the time necessary to obtain web traffic management tools to enhance the user experience.

    As the demand for silver remains greater than the supply, the reality is such that not everyone will be able to purchase a coin.

However, we are confident that during the postponement, we will be able to greatly improve on our ability to deliver the utmost positive U.S. Mint experience that our customers deserve. We will announce revised pre-order launch dates as soon as possible.

Did you catch this part: As the demand for silver remains greater than the supply, the reality is such that not everyone will be able to purchase a coin

Captain_Obviuos
Captain_Obviuos
  TheAssegai
May 28, 2021 3:45 pm

What you really need to look at is palladium. As of right now, it’s going for $2800/oz.

It’s used in a lot of things, like catalytic converters, and is the other part of white gold. It’s malleable like gold at room temperature, but unlike gold when it gets hotter it gets rigid, and it can absorb almost 900% of its volume in hydrogen at room temperature, which is why it’s used in CC’s and, more importantly, water purification.

Learn more about it here: https://www.britannica.com/science/palladium-chemical-element

Calamity
Calamity
  Captain_Obviuos
May 28, 2021 3:52 pm

As long as you’re basing the price of precious metals in Fed dollars it’s not a good investment. The government had to peg the price of gold to make paper money valuable in the first place. Gold and silver’s value came before the US dollar. If you buy precious metals the reason should be for any other reason than its price correlation to Fed money. Is it a hedge for when the Fed system blows up? Sure, but when that day comes any commodity with a limit supply will have value once the dollar is destroyed. Better off finding multiple physical assets that people would want in a trade and barter economy.

*I know you said palladium but I’m using gold and silver as my example because they’ve been used in real transactions throughout history. Palladium only has value relative to spot prices via dollar valuations.

TheAssegai
TheAssegai
  Captain_Obviuos
May 28, 2021 3:59 pm

Thanks, well made point. For me, however, Gold/Silver are and will be far easier to work with because they are known items. Junk silver (constitutional money) will be the easiest.

A year or so ago, a friend had a vehicle stored at a ‘secure’ storage facility, and thieves went through and were cutting out the catalytic converters.

Calamity
Calamity
  TheAssegai
May 28, 2021 4:01 pm

I prefer junk as well as old coins that can be considered collectables so it can’t be legally confiscated. I also will buy sterling silver because it has enough silver content to be used for barter if that ever becomes an economic reality.

Ken31
Ken31
  Captain_Obviuos
May 28, 2021 5:17 pm

Isn’t palladiums price more related to government policy than intrinsic value?