Gold News

Historic Shift Driving Gold Higher

Less equals more for the gold price as Gold Mining and scrap supplies flag...


I HAVE
reported many times how the Earth's gold mines have been yielding ever less gold, says Chris Weber of WeberGlobal, writing in Steve Sjuggerud's Daily Wealth.

This is the case even though the Gold Price has been soaring over the last decade. And you have to go back that long to find the peak year of new mine production. This happened in 1999.

That year, 83.69 million ounces of new gold came from mines. But back in that year, the price of gold was under $300, hitting a low of $256.

If someone would have predicted in 1999 that in 2010 the price of gold would reach $1250, they'd have been laughed at. But had they further said that that much higher price would have caused less Gold Mining output than had been the case in 1999, they'd have been thought absolutely crazy.

After all, if the price of something soars by 350%, then "everyone" knows that more of it will be produced. That's supposed to be basic economics. And yet, exactly the opposite has happened.

Though no one knew it at the time, 1999 marked the peak of global gold production. At least, so far it has. Last year, 2009, Gold Mining production hit 74.46 million ounces. It was a sizable 12.6% increase from the year before. But while it was the largest total in years, it was still not enough to surpass 1999's output.

Besides new mine output, there are two other ways new gold can come onto the market: central banks and scrap gold. Supplies are drying up there as well...

For the last several years, central banks around the world could be counted on to sell a combined 200 tonnes per year. However, this pattern changed drastically last year. We saw central banks accumulate gold for the first time in memory. China, of course, stands ready to buy all domestic production. India famously bought a big piece of the IMF Gold. Smaller central banks are buying as well.

If the average investor in the developed nations is still not interested (and says things like, "How can you eat gold?"), central banks are slowly rediscovering the value of having it as a reserve currency.

The second way that gold has come on the market is really the only other way new gold comes on these days. Well, it's actually not "new" gold at all. It is old gold scrap. Scrap gold can be many things, but it is mainly unwanted, broken, or bent gold jewelry. It can also be things as primitive as teeth or as sophisticated as the gold in cell phones and computers.

As the price of gold soared, people with this scrap gold rushed to sell it. The figures tell the story quite dramatically.

In 2008, while new mine production inched up by 1.38%, scrap gold soared by 34%. Scrap sales equaled nearly two-thirds of new mine output. I don't think anything like that had ever been seen before, even at the peak of the gold bull market of the late 1970s.

Adding new mine output and scrap gold together, you get 108.26 million ounces. Looked at that way, it was a new peak of gold coming on the market.

Except, it was foolish to consider the huge rise in scrap gold as an endlessly growing source of new supply. By their nature, there is a limited supply of teeth and rings that people want to part with.

Last year, scrap totals rose again, to the largest total ever: 53.63 million ounces. But while it was another good rise, the percentage increase slowed dramatically. As opposed to 2008's 34% increase, 2009 only saw a 26.75% increase.

Still, though, put new mine output and scrap gold together and you get a total of new gold available to buyers of 128.09 million ounces. On the surface of it, this amount was the highest total of gold ever. But if you look closer over last year's results, you'll notice something else...

New Gold Mining production was 74.46 million ounces and scrap was 53.63 million ounces. This meant that scrap equaled about 72% of mine production and over 40% of total new gold available for investors. That was a fresh record, and a huge percentage of new supply now relying on the scrap market.

Can it continue to deliver? The World Gold Council's figures from the first quarter of 2010 show scrap sales for this period were 11.03 million ounces. This represents a huge 43% fall from the first quarter of 2009.

Jan. to April this year also saw new Gold Mining production of 19 million ounces, a 1.37% increase. Putting the two sources together (scrap plus mine) you get 29.77 million ounces. Of course, it is very "iffy" to extrapolate for 2010 as a whole. However, if we do it, we get 119 million ounces, a 7% fall in total production, and during a year when Gold Prices will most likely rise.

The supply part of the supply/demand equation for gold has undergone a huge shift since the current bull market began in 2001. New mine production has peaked, central banks are now net buyers, and "scrap" gold supplies may have peaked as well.

I think that gold's startling failure to correct in price after the large run-up from the October 2008 lows of $693 is due in no small part to this changed equation. However you slice it, less gold is coming onto the market.

And demand seems to be growing every day. I sense people who have never bought a gold coin starting to test the waters, people who have not owned any gold ETFs starting to buy. If vast numbers of investors start to have even 5% of their portfolios in gold, this would constitute an explosion in demand.

In conclusion, I see this reduction of supply, coupled with increasing Gold Investment demand, supporting this bull market for years to come.

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Starting with $650 saved from his newspaper round, Chris Weber began buying and trading gold at age 16. A millionaire by 20, he switched into foreign currencies and debt investments as the US Fed finally started to tackle inflation in the early '80s. Now he shares his trades and insights with private investors through the Weber Global Opportunities Report.

See full archive of Chris Weber articles

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