With QE →∞ everywhere, it is not surprising that gold and silver have been performing strongly recently. Buyers from hedge funds to central banks to ultra-high net worth individuals abound. In the past the limitation has always been the ability of those categorised as commercials on Comex to put a lid on things. So the big question has to be, can they do it again, this time?
The chart below gives us some context. It is of all the categories of trader on Comex, plus open interest, in contracts of 100 ounces.
Note the sharp rise in open interest (black line) from historically low levels. Note also the principal driver, money managers (blue line), being met by increased shorts among producers and merchants (red) and swaps (green). Since Aug. 7:
- Open interest has increased sharply by 315 tonnes ($18.025bn).
- Money managers have added 275.3 tonnes ($15.8bn) from historically minimal net long positions. These positions in the past have been capped at about 220,000 contracts (a further 200 tonnes) before infinite QE and when the prospect of a euro-zone collapse was less likely. There should be more where this demand comes from.
- Swaps have gone net short, indicating they have increased their physical position in London, perhaps to benefit from the spread between minimal earnings on excess reserves at the Fed and the gold forward rate in London.
- Producers and merchants, the largest commercial category is maxed out with their shorts reaching near record levels at minus 212,572 contracts (661 tonnes).
The question arises: can money managers this time break the producers and merchants? If they do, the short-covering will be spectacular.
