"Gold has been the biggest story of this year," said Dan Denbow, a portfolio manager at the USAA Precious Metals & Minerals Fund in San Antonio, which oversees $600 million. "Last summer, people were calling it a barbaric relic, and nobody could care less about gold. Now, it's slowly generating more and more buying."
Futures advanced 10 percent since the end of January to $1,233.20 an ounce, poised for the biggest February gain since the 1970s. This year, US treasuries rose 2.9 percent, while the MSCI All-Country World Index of shares fell 6.2 percent. The yen, 2016's best-performing major currency, rose 6.5 percent against the dollar.
Last summer, people were calling it a barbaric relic, and nobody could care less about gold. Now, it's slowly generating more and more buying.
The net-long position in gold futures and options jumped 32 per cent to 123,566 contracts in the week ended February 23, according to US Commodity Futures Trading Commission data released three days later. Long wagers climbed for an eighth straight week, the longest streak since 2012.
Deteriorating global economies have increased concerns that the slowdown will be a drag on US growth, raising gold's appeal as a safety asset. At the same time, there is increasing doubt that the Federal Reserve will move as quickly as it planned to raise interest rates because the expansion may weaken. That increases the allure of bullion as a store of value.
Global holdings in gold ETFs surged 15 per cent in 2016 to 1,682.6 metric tons. That's the highest in more than a year, and the assets are on pace for the biggest quarterly increase since 2010.
The changing economic picture has pressured some analysts to rethink their approach to gold. Georgette Boele, a strategist at ABN AMRO Group, had been a bear and is now reversing her negative outlook. Boele boosted her year-end forecast to $1,300, from $900. The metal dropped 10 per cent in 2015 to $1,060.20. A gain this year would the first annual increase since 2012.
I dubbed gold as a superhero only because it was the biggest winner since the start of the year amongst other asset classes.
Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. economist Barnabas Gan, the most accurate precious-metals forecaster tracked by Bloomberg last year, last week called bullion a "superhero" because of its performance this year, and said prices could reach $1,400. Still, that would happen only if risk aversion intensifies, he said.
"I dubbed gold as a superhero only because it was the biggest winner since the start of the year amongst other asset classes," Gan said in an email Monday, adding that his base-case forecast is for prices to drop. They could retreat to $1,000 to $1,150 by the end of the year if Fed officials follow through with interest-rate increases, he said.
There are other naysayers. Robin Bhar, a London-based analyst at Societe Generale, is keeping his average fourth-quarter price forecast at $955. Goldman Sachs analysts including Jeffrey Currie and Max Layton reiterated in a Feb. 15 report their December forecast that prices will drop for a fourth straight year, dipping to $1,000 by the end of 2016. The Goldman analysts and Societe Generale's Bhar expect that the Fed will raise rates this year, eroding the appeal of the metal because it doesn't pay dividends or yields.
"We're not ready to make the cross into the bullish camp yet," Bhar said in a telephone interview. "It's a bit painful for the bears, ourselves included, but we just don't see the evidence yet. We expect global turmoil to start easing. Obviously, if it doesn't, it's another warning sign, and we'll see further buying of gold, further inflows into the gold ETFs."
- Bloomberg