Comex: Total Inventory Grows but Supply to Meet Delivery Shrinks

SchiffGold Gold Silver Comex Stock

More metal is being put into Eligible


Author

Affiliation

Exploring Finance

 

Published

May 19, 2022

DOI


This article first appeared on SchiffGold.

This analysis focuses on gold and silver within the Comex/CME futures exchange. See the article What is the Comex? for more detail. The charts and tables below specifically analyze the physical stock/inventory data at the Comex to show the physical movement of metal into and out of Comex vaults.

Registered = Warrant assigned and can be used for Comex delivery, Eligible = No warrant attached - owner has not made it available for delivery.

Gold

Banks restocked gold again for the third month in a row, but the makeup was a bit different. Rather than increasing in both Eligible and Registered, this month saw a drop in Registered and an increase in Eligible. The fall in Registered indicates that holders are removing their metal from the available supply for delivery. This month saw the largest reduction in Registered since October 2021.

Jan 2021Apr 2021Jul 2021Oct 2021Jan 2022Apr 2022−2M−1M01M2M
EligibleRegisteredGold: Month over Month change in stockOunces of Gold1.20.70.60.90.12.61.10.2-0.1-2.2-2.3-0.3-0.2-0.9-0.2-0.8-0.2-0.5-0.9

Figure 1: Recent Monthly Stock Change

As can be seen below, the majority of the move happened in the last two days as the June contract nears delivery. The two moves happening in tandem shows that this was holders moving from Registered to Eligible rather than metal flowing in and out.

Apr 242022May 1May 8May 15−200k−100k0100k−200k0200k400k
EligibleRegisteredCum Change EligibleCum Change RegisteredGold: Daily and Cumulative Change in Stock Since Last ReportOunces of GoldCumulative Change

Figure 2: Recent Monthly Stock Change

Silver

Silver has seen its first net inflow since December with 4.8M ounces flowing into Eligible so far. Unlike gold, this supply did not come from Registered but was new metal entering the vault.

Jan 2021Apr 2021Jul 2021Oct 2021Jan 2022Apr 2022−20M−10M010M20M
EligibleRegisteredSilver: Month over Month change in stockOunces of Silver6.28.50.81.88.13.64.8-4.3-22.9-8.8-8.2-0.9-1.1-7.7-1.2-1.6-7.2-5.8-7.3

Figure 3: Recent Monthly Stock Change

The chart below shows that this has been a steady accumulation over the last 30 days.

Apr 242022May 1May 8May 15−1M01M2M−5M05M10M
EligibleRegisteredCum Change EligibleCum Change RegisteredSilver: Daily and Cumulative Change in Stock Since Last ReportOunces of SilverCumulative Change

Figure 4: Recent Monthly Stock Change

The table below summarizes the movement activity over several time periods.

Gold

Silver

Pledged gold (a subset of Registered), continues to increase after the big jump on April 8th. Although Pledged is considered a subset of Registered, it cannot be made available for delivery without the Pledge being removed. Pledged represents gold that has been pledged as collateral. Removing Pledged from Registered in the table above would shrink the total Registered by over 10%.

Jan 2021Apr 2021Jul 2021Oct 2021Jan 2022Apr 20221.6M1.8M2M2.2M2.4M
Gold Total Pledged AmountOunces of Pledged Gold

Figure 5: Gold Pledged Holdings

The next table shows the activity by bank/Holder. It details the numbers above to see the movement specific to vaults.

Gold

Silver

Unlike last month where gold and silver were moving in opposite directions, the two metals are moving in similar fashion in the latest month.

Historical Perspective

Zooming out and looking at the inventory for gold and silver since 2016 shows the impact that Covid had on the Comex vaults. Gold had almost nothing in the Registered category before JP Morgan and Brinks added their London inventory with nearly 20M ounces.

The recent effort to restock is shown on the far right. From this perspective, the increase in inventory appears relatively small. With such a deep inventory, it seems strange for the banks to all be restocking right now. It’s possible that true inventory is much smaller than what appears.

201720182019202020212022010M20M30M40M0.0%10.0%20.0%30.0%40.0%50.0%60.0%
EligibleRegisteredRegistered as a % of totalGold: Historical Stock of Eligible and RegisteredTotal Stock of Gold in ouncesRegistered Percentage

Figure 6: Historical Eligible and Registered

Silver has seen a big move down in Registered as a % of the total. After a recent spike in March up to 27.1%, it has since fallen back to 23.8%. If Registered outflows continued, the ratio could hit the lowest level since April 2018.

2017201820192020202120220100M200M300M400M15.0%20.0%25.0%30.0%35.0%40.0%
EligibleRegisteredRegistered as a % of totalSilver: Historical Stock of Eligible and RegisteredTotal Stock of Silver in ouncesRegistered Percentage

Figure 7: Historical Eligible and Registered

Available supply for potential demand

As can be seen in the chart below, the ratio of open interest to total stock has fallen from over 8 to 1.46. In terms of Registered (available for delivery against open interest), the ratio collapsed from nose bleed levels (think Nov 2019 where 100% stood for delivery) down to 2.78 in the latest month. This is down from 3.41 in early March and 2.87 last month.

20172018201920202021202224681012400k500k600k700k800k
Total Open InterestRegistered Stock RatioTotal Stock RatioGold: Open interest ounces divided by Available StockRatio of OpenInterest to StockOpen Interest

Figure 8: Open Interest/Stock Ratio

Coverage in silver is weaker than in gold with 8.9 open interest contracts to each available physical supply of Registered (down from 9.87 in mid-April). The ratio collapsed mainly due to a dramatic fall in open interest from 170k to 142k.

The ratio was on the cusp of breaking into the 10 handle before the fall in open interest brought the ratio back down.

201720182019202020212022010203040140k160k180k200k220k240k
Total Open InterestRegistered Stock RatioTotal Stock RatioSilver: Open interest ounces divided by Available StockRatio of OpenInterest to StockOpen Interest

Figure 9: Open Interest/Stock Ratio

Wrapping Up

After seeing significant activity over the last 18 months, the vaults were a bit quieter this month. Perhaps this is due to both gold and silver seeing hard pullbacks. Regardless, on the surface the vaults look well stocked to meet any demand coming. That being said, the movement within the vaults does lead to speculation as to how deep inventories really are if they were to be tested.

With inflation showing no signs of abating, and the Fed talking tough but doing nothing, it’s only a matter of time before precious metals gets back on people’s radar. It’s likely the stocks at the Comex will be tested.


Data Source: https://www.cmegroup.com/

Data Updated: Daily around 3PM Eastern

Last Updated: May 17, 2022

Gold and Silver interactive charts and graphs can always be found on the Exploring Finance dashboard: https://exploringfinance.shinyapps.io/goldsilver/