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New Year, Same Risks Drive Gold

19 January 2021

 

Gold Support Holds In December

The Thanksgiving holiday attempt by short speculators to drive gold prices below the technically important $1,800 per ounce level failed, as gold rebounded to $1,815/oz on 1 December and gained $121.41 (6.8%) to end the month at $1,898.36/oz. Gold stocks also had strong moves with gains of 4.57% for the NYSE Gold Miners Index (GDMNTR)and 10.76% for the MVIS Global Junior Miners Index (MVGDXJTR)2.

News of vaccine shipments and shots during the month had no impact on gold, which suggests the vaccine excitement was fully priced into the gold market weakness in November. Gold trended to its monthly high of $1,906/oz on 21 December, when Congress reached a final agreement on $900 billion of deficit spending for a new coronavirus relief package. Gold was also supported by a weakening dollar, which fell to new 30-month lows brought on by “risk-on” trading with new highs in the stock market. Importantly, the heavy gold bullion ETF outflows seen in November also stopped in December.

Silver sprang to life in the second half of the year, outperforming gold by 38% and gaining 16.6% in December. As both a monetary and industrial metal, silver is enjoying the best of both worlds—one of systemic risks in which gold thrives, and the other of post pandemic growth expectations and green initiatives in which copper thrives. As reference, copper ended the year at $3.52 per pound, its highest price in nearly seven years.

Looking Back On 2020…

Gold Closes The Decade Strongly

Gold gained 25.1% or $381/oz in 2020, its largest annual percentage gain in ten years. A myriad of pandemic-related drivers moved gold beginning in January with the outbreak in China. Gold advanced to seven-year highs in February as COVID spread to South Korea. However, in the last week of February, news of infections in Italy, Iran and the U.S. caused markets to crash and gold fell to its low of the year of $1,451 on 16 March. Gold stocks also tumbled as investors sought to raise cash for margin calls, redemptions and risk-off positioning. Once the panic abated, gold and gold stocks snapped back, returning to their pre-crash levels in early April. Gold reached new long-term highs in April, May and June. On 27 July, it surpassed the $1,921/oz all-time high set in 2011 and went on to its ultimate high of $2,075/oz on 7 August.

Since August, gold has taken a breather, consolidating in the $1,800 - $2,000/oz range. News of positive COVID vaccine test results in early November brought hopes for a return to normalcy, causing gold to fall and test long-term technical support at $1,800/oz. Support held and gold trended higher in December as the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY)made new lows, ending the year at $1,898/oz.

Gains Highlighted By Market Uncertainty, Systemic Risks

The gold bull market in 2020 had a number of drivers, including:

  • Uncertainty and risks caused by the pandemic
  • U.S. Federal Reserve Bank (Fed) interest rate target cuts (to 0%), falling bond yields and negative real rates
  • Massive and unprecedented government deficit spending
  • Fed quantitative easing (to buy treasuries and mortgage backed securities at $120 billion/month)
  • Unprecedented expansion of Fed programs to purchase securities and extend credit across the economy
  • Soaring debt levels among businesses
  • Dollar weakness beginning in July
  • Trade and other tensions with China

Record inflows into gold bullion exchange traded products are a testament to how investors are using gold to protect their portfolios from currency debasement, systemic collapse or inflation that may come as the unintended consequences of zero-rate policies, massive debt loads and the trillions of dollars of liquidity being pumped into the global economy.

Miners Outpace The Metal

Gold miners’ performance outpaced gold for most of the year, despite some consolidation towards the end of the year. And while, broadly speaking, investors should expect gold equities to outperform the commodity in a rising gold price environment (due to the inherent leverage miners have to the metal), it is not uncommon to see companies underperform when carrying elevated risks. A majority of the gold miners we invested in proved adept at handling COVID protocols, while production and costs were not significantly impacted. The most successful producers remained focused on controlling costs, free cash flow, disciplined capital allocation and returns to shareholders. As well, according to quarterly reports, many of these same companies increased their dividends throughout the year and now have yields that, on average, exceed two percent.

More Of The Same For Gold In 2021?

We expect the same drivers that propelled gold in 2020 to continue in 2021. Later in the year, the world will become a very different place once the U.S. and other nations achieve herd immunity. Here we try to identify the remaining risks that might drive gold once the virus has been tamed:

  • Negative Rates & Asset Bubbles – Foremost is the risk from the distorting influence negative nominal rates, negative real rates and zero rate policies have on the markets. The Fed has indicated it will maintain a zero rate policy at least through 2023. Nano-yields force investors into riskier segments of the investment spectrum. Markets are further distorted by massive government interventions to purchase assets and inject liquidity into the economy through loans, spending and grants. As a result, we are seeing the same asset price inflation as seen after the global financial crisis, but this time it is on steroids. Incredibly, while still in the throes of an epic health crisis, bubbles or manias have formed in stocks, corporate credit, bitcoin and residential housing. Margin debt and call options are at record levels. The greater fool theory is in full force, while another crash is a possibility.
  • Debt – A second risk is the huge debt load carried by governments and corporations. No one knows what the debt capacity limits are, but it is surely a finite number that might be crossed at any time. Also, anything that causes a surge in interest rates might make debt service an overwhelming liability.
  • New Administration – Expected policies of the incoming Biden Administration are a third risk. Campaign promises of tax increases on corporations and individuals, along with increased regulations on many parts of the economy are likely to hinder economic growth. Deficit spending, possibly in the trillions, will add to the debt load. More spending by government on favored industries, state and local governments and various federal programs will stimulate the economy, however, government spending is probably the least productive use of capital known to mankind.
  • Inflation – Inflation is another risk that may take many investors by surprise. We expect annual inflation to surge above 2% beginning in March when the 2020 pandemic recession becomes the new basis for year-over-year measures. Later in the year, warmer weather and the proliferation of vaccinations may usher in the new roaring twenties - a surge in demand and virtually unlimited spending made possible by the massive government sponsored liquidity sloshing around the financial system. Inflation may transform from a year-over-year aberration to a lasting problem.
  • Weakening U.S. Dollar – The DXY fell 6.8% in 2020. This weakness might morph into a longer bear market for the dollar in 2021 for several reasons. With the Fed’s zero-rate policy, the dollar no longer enjoys superior sovereign rates. In fact, real (inflation adjusted) treasury yields are now less than those on Japanese and German government bonds. As the economic recovery gains momentum, emerging economies with higher growth rates will attract capital from the U.S. Also, the fiscal position of the U.S. is likely to deteriorate further under the Biden Administration.

Tracing Gold’s Past

Gold has been in a bull market since December 2015 (Chart 1). The chart pattern of this market looks similar to the first five years of the 2001 to 2011 bull market (Chart 2). It will be interesting to see if the chart similarities continue. After 2006, the former bull market found catalysts in the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and the European Debt Crisis in 2010. The current bull market will certainly need further catalysts to realize similar gains. The risks we have outlined along with the dollar’s trend could provide such catalysts.

Gold’s Recent Bull Market Run (From 2015 To Present)

Gold's Recent Bull Market Run (From 2015 To Present)

Gold Following Its 2001 To 2011 Bull Market Trend?

Gold Following Its 2001 To 2011 Bull Market Trend?

Source: Bloomberg, VanEck. Data as of 4 January 2020.

All company, sector, and sub-industry weightings as of 31 December 2020, unless otherwise noted. Source: VanEck, FactSet.

1NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index (GDMNTR) is a modified market capitalization-weighted index comprised of publicly traded companies involved primarily in the mining for gold.

2MVIS Global Junior Gold Miners Index (MVGDXJTR) is a rules-based, modified market capitalization-weighted, float-adjusted index comprised of a global universe of publicly traded small- and medium-capitalization companies that generate at least 50% of their revenues from gold and/or silver mining, hold real property that has the potential to produce at least 50% of the company’s revenue from gold or silver mining when developed, or primarily invest in gold or silver.

3The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) measures the value of the U.S. dollar relative to a basket of foreign currencies, often referred to as a basket of U.S. trade partners' currencies.

Important Disclosure

This is a marketing communication. Please refer to the prospectus of the UCITS and to the KID before making any final investment decisions.

This information originates from VanEck (Europe) GmbH, which has been appointed as distributor of VanEck products in Europe by the Management Company VanEck Asset Management B.V., incorporated under Dutch law and registered with the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM). VanEck (Europe) GmbH with registered address at Kreuznacher Str. 30, 60486 Frankfurt, Germany, is a financial services provider regulated by the Federal Financial Supervisory Authority in Germany (BaFin).

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