Gold ETF inflows total almost 14
t in January
04
February 2021
According
to new World Gold Council data, global gold ETFs saw inflows of 13.8 t (US$1
billion, 0.4%) in January, after two consecutive months of outflows in November
and December, which had totalled 148.8 t. Global assets under management (AUM)
now stands at 3765 t (US$226 billion), just 4% shy of the intra-month record
3915.8 t (US$244 billion) set in early November.
Regional
overview
At
a regional level, performance was mixed. Inflows were seen in Europe and other
regions, while North America saw outflows and Asia was virtually flat during
the month. European funds accounted for the bulk of the global inflows, as gold
holdings rose by 17.5 t (US$1.1 billion, 1.2%). UK-listed funds led the way,
adding 9.4 t, followed by German- and French-listed funds. Funds in other
regions saw the largest m/m change (relative to size), with regional holdings rising
by 2.7 t (US$182 million, 4.9%). Holdings in North American funds, which
account for 53% of global AUM, fell fractionally by 6.3 t (-US$303 million,
-0.2%) in January. Holdings in Asian funds were effectively flat during the
month, with AUM up by US$19.2 million, as inflows slowed largely a function of
rising real yields, a strong equity market and a strengthening renminbi (RMB)
in China.
Price
performance and trading volumes
Gold
in US dollar-terms fell fractionally (-1.3%) in January to finish at US$1863.8/oz.
This left gold as one of the weakest performing assets during the month,
particularly when compared to the broader commodities complex. As the new year
ushered in the start of the Biden Administration, there was renewed hope for
further fiscal stimulus in the US, supported by the Federal Reserve maintaining
their dovish stance; this kept gold constrained, and it spent much of the month
in a narrow US$20/oz range and finding resistance at the US$1860/oz level.
Short-term implied volatility in gold – reflecting market expectations of
future movements in the price – remained stable at 17.
Trading
volumes for gold finished the month at US$186 billion/d, fractionally above the
2020 average of US$183 billion, but significantly higher than December as COMEX
gold futures volumes almost doubled in January – US$61 billion vs US$34 billion
the previous month. Net long positioning, via the recent Commitment of Traders
(COT) report for gold COMEX futures, fell at the start of the month before
slowly recovering to 782 t, below the 2020 average net long level of 871 t.
Gold drivers in 2021
As
the World Gold Council has noted in its Gold Outlook 2021, investment demand
should remain well supported this year. It believes that investors continue to
face several portfolio risks which they must navigate, including:
Ballooning budget deficits.
Concerns around increasing inflationary pressures.
The potential for equity market corrections as valuations remain high.
And
the opportunity cost of holding gold is likely to remain low for the
foreseeable future. For example, the Federal Reserve Chairman, Jerome Powell,
has indicated that interest rates in the US would be kept low to provide
continued support for an economic recovery.Gold’s strong 2020 performance, a
year in which it had one of its lowest historical drawdowns, helped investors
limit losses and manage volatility risk. In the light of this, we anticipate
that investors will continue to view an allocation to gold favourably as a
hedge against the ongoing risks mentioned above. Gold ETF inflows in January
appear to provide support for this view.
Regional
flows
North American funds had outflows of 6.3 t (-US$302.7 million, -0.2% AUM).
Holdings in European funds grew by 17.5 t (US$1.1 billion, 1.2%).
Funds listed in Asia had minimal net inflows of US$19.2 million (0.3%).
Other regions had inflows of 2.7 t (US$181.9 million, 4.9%).
Individual flows
In Europe, UK-listed fund Invesco Physical Gold (6.9 t, US$421.1 million, 3%)
led global inflows, followed by Amundi Physical Gold (4.6 t, US$278.1 million,
8.5%) and iShares Physical Gold (3.4 t, US$217.1 million, 1.5%). However,
UK-listed funds Gold Bullion Securities (-1 t, -US$60.1 million, -1.3%) and
WisdomTree Physical Gold (-1 t, -US$59.3 million, -0.8%) also registered
notable declines in AUM.
In North America, SPDR® Gold Shares shed 10.6 t (-US$575.9 million, -0.8%).
SPDR Gold MiniShares had holdings rise by 3.1 t (US$186.4 million, 4.6%),
followed by iShares Gold Trust added 1.7 t (US$117.3 million, 0.4%).
In
Asia, three Chinese funds were in the bottom 10 individual fund flows: Huaan
Yifu Gold (-0.5 t, -US$31.7 million, -2%), E Fund Gold Tradable Open-end Securities
Investment Fund (-0.4 t, -US$25.6 million, -4.3%), and Bosera Gold (-0.2 t,
-US$16 million, -1.4%).
Long-term trends
Global AUM now stands at 3765 t, just 4% shy of the intra-month record set in
early November 2020.
Following
record-setting inflows in the first 10 months of 2020, flows turned negative in
November and December, before reversing course again in the first month of
2021.
Investment demand for gold via ETFs remains strong and a primary driver of
overall gold demand.
Asian gold ETFs holdings have grown by more than 50% over the past 12 months.
Low-cost gold-backed ETFs grew meaningfully during 2020, and generally
continued to see inflows in January.
Source:
https://www.globalminingreview.com/s