So Who is Buying Gold and Where Do You Get Data on Gold?
Below is an article form Global Economic Intersection concerning a new gold buying index published by the Bullion Vault. The article below is a rewritten version of the article appearing in the Bullion Vault. Here is a list of important sources of information on gold:
There are any number of sites on the Commitment of Traders (COT) but here is one I like:
GOLD was
up, up and away in September. DOLLAR Gold Prices put
on 7.7% in September, and hit new all-time highs against the Euro and Swiss
Franc.
But who was doing the buying?
New data we released today here at
BullionVault show that private households across Western Europe and the US
continue to join the bull market. But their response to QE3 and the latest
phase of the Eurozone crisis is more measured – you might even say complacent –
than the recent price action alone suggests.
Marcus Grubb of the World Gold
Council, which is a shareholder in BullionVault, had the following to say today
(Wednesday, 03 October 2012) at the launch of our new Gold Investor
Index here in London:
"There has until now been a lack of hard data
on self-directed retail investors in gold.
"For instance, the data we produce [the
excellent Gold Demand Trends] is more at the macro level, including
institutional and private wealth management. This new Gold Investor Index is a
real innovation – a unique and useful addition to the data already available.
It's a coincident indicator of what private households are choosing to do with
regards to physical gold."
How
so? BullionVault's new Gold Investor
Index is a monthly data point based on actual trading on BullionVault, the world's
largest provider of physical gold ownership to private investors. Since launch
in April 2005 it's now been used by more than 42,000 private investors from 159
countries worldwide.
Almost
90% of BullionVault users live in the UK, US or Eurozone. So the Gold Investor
Index shows what the largest pool of private gold investors in the developed
Western world is doing with its metal – either buying more or selling, or
choosing to sit tight. They can all make that decision as they choose using
BullionVault's peer-to-peer exchange online, a truly international market in
physical bullion which is accessible to people all over the world. You will not
find a more reliable guide to the wider retail-investment market in physical
gold.
How
does BullionVault's Gold Investor
Index work? First, it takes the balance of net buyers (who
added to their holdings, and so includes new entrants) versus net sellers over
the last calendar month. The index then shows that figure as a proportion of
all existing gold owners to give a comparable series over time. The index is
rebased so that a perfect balance of buyers and sellers would give a reading of
50.0.
In
September this year therefore, and as the chart shows, self-directed investors
in the West grew more bullish on gold. Rising from August's reading of 52.1 to
52.5, however, the Gold Investor Index still lagged levels seen earlier this
year, and it was well below the series-record to date – the level of 71.7 hit
in September 2011.
So,
September 2012's reading on the Gold Investor
Index undoes any talk of a "gold bubble" amongst Western
households. Because the private investor response to QE3 and the latest phase
of the Eurozone crisis is far more measured than the last time gold prices
reached their current level. This may give succour to central bankers and other
policymakers hoping to buy time. The index suggests households are less anxious
about inflation or a currency crisis than bank analysts and managed wealth
advisors.
It's
hard to find any gold bears amongst professional investors right now. Amongst
self-directed retail investors too, sentiment towards gold is bullish. But hard
transactional data from the world's largest pool says they're not as bullish –
in aggregate – as they were earlier in the year. And sentiment towards gold is
way below the moments of extreme investor stress seen previously in this
financial crisis, such as late-summer 2011.
The
new Gold Investor
Index confirms what we're hearing from our friends and contacts
in the coin and small-bar business. Sales have been lacklustre since spring.
That may change, however, if the UK's over-valued Pound, the Eurozone's
unceasing crisis, and the US fiscal cliff crash into each other towards New
Year. Either way, the new Gold Investor Index will clearly show how private
investors respond.
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