Gold shows life, Silver is mixed
This article first appeared on SchiffGold.
This analysis focuses on Gold and Silver physical delivery on the Comex. See the article What is the Comex for more detail.
Silver completed a minor delivery month. As can be seen below, the amount delivered is below recent months at 2,149 contracts. Currently there are zero contracts open, so this is most likely the total for the month.
Looking at the mid-month activity also shows middling results. The Red bar below indicates how many contracts were open and delivered in the same month. August had 149 such contracts, above April’s 74 but below the 679 from June. The mid-month contract open for delivery (a strong indication of physical demand) is the main driver for Aug being below the June contract as shown above.
Despite a slightly lower number than the last several minor months, it’s still important to put this August into historical context. The chart below shows the notional amount of delivery in previous Augusts. Some of the discrepancy is due to the current Silver price being higher and not only high contract volume, but the most recent August is substantially above previous August contracts. This shows that delivery demand is still historically high.
Jumping ahead to September, a major delivery month, shows that Silver is below the trend line compared to recent major months. It is still too early to gauge what delivery will be like for September based on the chart below, but with 5 days to go there are still 47k contracts open for September.
Deliveries have been on a steady decline since peaking last July at 17,294 contracts. July saw some very suspicious behavior. Looking like a record delivery month was possible, Open Interest fell off a cliff in the final day before first notice (see Figure 2 above).
This month should be a good indication of whether the physical delivery is still very strong or starting to wane.
The cost to roll is the difference between the current month and the next major month (December). It has slightly above recent months, but might not be high enough to trigger significant deliveries.
The charts below follow the same order as the Silver charts above.
August gold is a major delivery month. August Gold finally reversed trend, finishing higher than June with 25,845 contracts standing for delivery and 51 contracts still open.
The more compelling story is what happened during the month. August gold only had 19k contracts open at First Position. This means that 6,863 contracts have been open for immediate delivery during the month of August. From a major month perspective, that is the largest number since last June saw 7,969 contracts opened for delivery.
This implies strong physical demand for Gold. After falling month after month it was great to see an uptick in delivery volume. Especially because it occurred mid-month. Aug originally looked like it would be a big miss (green bar below).
Putting August into historical context shows that this last August dollar delivery is well above all other August months except 2020. At 4.7B dollars of Gold being delivered, this is more than double the pre2020 record.
September Gold is a minor delivery month. The current trajectory is promising. Open Interest was drifting down and capitulated during the gold flash crash. Since then, Gold September has seen a strong rebound. It still sits below recent minor months, but the trend has been an acceleration into the close. If the trend holds, the next 5 days should show an increase in contracts.
The last several minor months show a very choppy pattern. There have been a few massive months but also low delivery months. It was good to see July trending above May and January, but it’s still a far cry from the bigger months. Currently September sits at 1,915 so it’s very possible that September beats out July. If so, this will show growing physical demand and more evidence the downward trend may be reversing.
A few months ago, physical demand for Gold was looking very weak. It’s possible that the technical picture may have resulted in capitulation. With the Fed looking to delay tapering, Gold may see a stronger fourth quarter than most money managers were positioned for. Next weeks COTs report will show the final positioning prior to Labor Day and August jobs numbers.
Silver is looking mixed. Neither strong nor weak. Most likely it will follow Gold in the months ahead. While a strong 4th quarter probably won’t be enough to top delivery demand from 2020, it’s still clear that physical demand is much stronger than pre-2020 levels.
Data Source: https://www.cmegroup.com/
Data Updated: Nightly around 11PM Eastern
Last Updated: Aug 25, 2021
Gold and Silver interactive charts and graphs can be found on the Exploring Finance dashboard: https://exploringfinance.shinyapps.io/goldsilver/