Showing posts with label Shanghai Gold Exchange. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shanghai Gold Exchange. Show all posts

15 June 2019

Physical Gold Withdrawals from the Shanghai Gold Exchange and The New Silk Road


"Time is coming when markets search frantically for physical collateral to find that paper far exceeds underlying collateral for several metals and other resources.    I am warning that when markets fall in sustained negative response to bursting bubbles, widespread deleveraging will reveal insufficient hard collateral underlying traded asset-backed securities.  The words rehypothecation and hyper-rehypothecation may be rediscovered or remembered again, forgotten somehow during much of decade since the Great Financial Crisis."

Harald Malmgren


"Gold has 'worked' down from Alexander's time.  When something holds good for two thousand years I do not believe it can be so because of prejudice or mistaken theory."  

Bernard M. Baruch

One might wonder why these countries are steadily acquiring such enormous inventories of gold bullion.

And they might even notice that since around 2008 the central banks of the world have become net buyers of gold, after many years of managed selling.

Gold is flowing from West to East, and into strong hands and official vaults as security against a changing monetary landscape.  And except for the occasional use of subtrefuge and force, it will not return to the public markets anywhere near to these current valuations.



18 February 2019

Shanghai Gold Exchange Transactions - Boom Boom Boom Boom


The Shanghai Gold Exchange is a bit different from most, because they deal in the exchange of actual physical metal for paper, rather than mostly paper for paper, in a mad game of Liar's Poker played over a highly leveraged and apparently diminished  base of physical assets.

Gold is flowing from West to East.

The long bear market in gold, fostered by official gold sales has ended. Central banks have become net buyers since 2009.  

Long term gold pools always end, and most always end in the same manner.

Boom.







10 October 2018

Shanghai Gold Exchange - A Steady Source of Demand for Physical Gold


"Since 2013 China continues to absorb physical gold from the rest of the world at a staggering pace.  Worth noting is that gold imported into the Chinese domestic market is not allowed to be returned in the foreseeable future. 

Because ownership and the disposition of these volumes of gold likely will be of great importance next time around the international monetary system is under stress, it’s well worth tracking China’s progress of imports – especially because the mainstream media and most consultancy firms are in denial of these events."

Koos Jansen, BullionStar


"Gold is unique among assets, in that it is not issued by any government or central bank, which means that its value is not influenced by political decisions or the solvency of one institution or another."

Salvatore Rossi, Chief of the Central Bank of Italy, 30 Sept 2013

Related:   The Chinese Gold Market Essentials Guide


10 August 2018

Shanghai Gold Withdrawals Remain Brisk - Silk Road Demand


Shanghai gold withdrawals remain brisk.

On its own, Shanghai is taking a big chunk of total world gold production by itself as shown in the third chart.

Gold continues to move from West to East.

I could not happen to notice this evening when someone mentioned the US' current issues with Russia, Turkey, and China, that all of these countries have been major accumulators of physical gold.

The other big major is India, the government of which has been engaging in all sorts of gimmicks to attempt to dampen the private gold demand  driven by the people who use gold jewelry as a means of savings.

Got to serve and protect that petrodollar, right?


16 December 2016

Shanghai Gold Exchange Deliveries Have Their Biggest Day of the Year


Shanghai Gold Exchange deliveries totaled 39.6 tonnes.

This is by far the largest amount of gold bullion transactions on the exchange this year.

Does price really matter?  Perhaps to some.


Related:  The Gold Market Manipulation Case and Timeline


13 December 2016

Shanghai Gold Exchange Sees Strong 214.7 Tonnes Physical Bullion Offtake In November


Buying the dip.

The West keeps quacking, and Asia keeps stacking.

As goes the Western paper gold trade, thus ends most over-leveraged pyramid schemes and confidence games.

Badly.


01 December 2016

China Buying the Dip - 28.652 Tonnes Delivered on the Shanghai Gold Exchange In One Day


The top of the chart is cumulative, the bottom portion is the daily volume.

Yesterday was easily the biggest day of this year for physical gold deliveries in Shanghai.

They may show themselves only in the longer term, but pricing action does develop profound physical market consequences for supply and demand.   History has proven that.


Related: Major Gold Price Divergence Between Shanghai and London




14 July 2016

New York and Shanghai Gold Deliveries



An interesting perspective comparing the gold markets of New York and Shanghai.

From Nick Laird at goldchartsrus.com.






07 July 2016

Relentless: Shanghai 138.5 Tonnes of Gold Withdrawn In June


"Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth."

Buddha

There were 138.5 tonnes of gold taken from the Shanghai Gold Exchange in June.

This brings the first half of 2016 withdrawals to 973 tonnes.

Koos Jansen has written a very informative article with some interesting charts about these new Chinese gold demand numbers here.

He also examines an incorrect set of data about this from Nomura.

As a reminder, the US will be releasing its Non-Farm Payrolls Report For June tomorrow.

These charts are from Nick Laird at goldchartsrus.com.






12 April 2016

Shanghai Gold Exchange Withdrawals a Brisk 183 Tonnes of Gold Bullion for March


The Shanghai Gold Exchange reports that there were 183.242 tonnes of gold withdrawn during the month of March.

These charts are from Nick Laird at goldchartsrus.com.









06 February 2016

Shanghai Gold Exchange Withdrawals For January 2016 Total 225.8 Tonnes



Shanghai Gold Exchange has decided to publish their gold withdrawal figures on a monthly basis rather than weekly.

For January 2016 there were 225.8 tonnes withdrawn from the exchange.






24 January 2016

Shanghai Gold Exchange Withdrawals in 2015 Rise to 91% of Annual World Gold Production


The situation is nicely captured in these two simple charts.

The strains on supply are obvious, although it does take quite a bit of work to estimate the shrinkage of the 'gold float' of available supply.

Nothing here that could not be remedied by higher prices, if they were simply allowed to rise in reponse to physical tightness.

Gold is trading with an unusual duality:  as a synthetic derivative like those associated with the highly leverage financial paper markets , and as a commodity susceptiable to physical supply and demand.






21 January 2016

Another Year of Insubstantial Gold Trading in the New York Market


Looking back, it is evident from the charts below that 2015 was another year of decline for physical gold deliveries in New York.  This is thought to be a benign phenomenon by some.

And one might certainly question how much of that 'stockpile' of gold held in storage is unencumbered, and not subject to multiple hypothecation.

As you know I think that such a decline in the connection to the fundamental flows of a physical commodity creates a potentially dangerous situation, especially in a climate in which most of the major markets have shown themselves to have been systematically rigged by corrupt trading institutions.

The second chart shows how dramatically the physical gold market has moved to the East, leaving both New York and London as influential to price while becoming increasingly insubstantial.

Finally the third chart shows that the New York market still maintains a strong physical delivery function for silver. This is largely thanks to CNT, which is a major supplier of silver to the Mint among other things.

Related:  In China Everyone Can Buy Gold at the Shanghai Gold Exchange - Koos Jansen






09 January 2016

Shanghai Gold Exchange Year End Gold Withdrawal Numbers


As of the end of the year the Shanghai Exchange has seen 2,596 tonnes in withdrawals of gold bullion.

Total deliveries since its inception in 2009 are 10,510 tonnes.




01 January 2016

26 December 2015

Shanghai Gold Withdrawals Top 2500 Tonnes For This Year


With 57.75 tonnes withdrawn in the latest week, the number of tonnes of gold bullion withdrawn from the Shanghai Gold Exchange stands at 2,503 tonnes for the year to date.

This is the most gold ever withdrawn from this or from any exchange in a single year that I can find in the post-WW II era.

And this record breaking phenomenon is for the most part being ignored.  It seems in retrospect almost unprecedented, and is particularly odd given the relative  'drying up' of deliveries of physical gold in NY and the shrinking of the 'free gold float' inventories in London.  





05 December 2015

China Understands the Gold Bullion Game - Lars Schall and Koos Jansen


Here is a new interview from Zurich's Lars Schall with Koos Jansen, discussing the Chinese gold market and the patterns of People's Bank of China purchasing for their reserves, both disclosed and otherwise.

You may find a complete transcript of this interview from Lars Schall's site at China Playing the Gold Game Carefully.

The gold bullion game is much broader and more politically charged than most commodity markets, since it cuts into the push and pull between nations and groups of nations and very powerful private groups that seek to use money for their own purposes of power.

Contrary to the very clumsy public relations campaign, gold is hardly a 'pet rock' or something about which the central banks never think.

Related:
Silk Road Gold Demand Taking All New Mine Production and More - A Game of Consquences
Koos Jansen: Renminbi Internationalization and China's Gold Strategy