Thank ETF investors for higher gold prices

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Swiss 100 gram gold bars and Canadian maple leaf gold coins

Gold prices are up. Thank ETF investors.

That’s the takeaway from a recent note from research shop DataTrek, which contrasted the 18.4% full-year increase in the gold price with a 1% decline in global demand for the precious metal. The big price jump was a double-edged sword, DataTrek noted: it attracted investors but kept consumers on the sidelines.

Throughout the year, as volatility buffeted markets and global downturn concerns pushed investors into safer havens, exchange-traded fund holdings of gold rose 16% to 2,886 tons, an all-time high.

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Global central banks, which have been big buyers of gold in recent years, were more subdued in 2019. They bought 0.9% less gold in 2019, but that was still enough to keep full-year purchases near a 10-year high. Central banks like those in Russia and China buy gold as “a way of gaining US dollar exposure (gold is priced in greenbacks globally) without helping the American government fund its ever-growing budget deficit,” said Nicholas Colas, DataTrek’s co-founder. “Gold is also a hedge against their local currency, of course.”

Consumer purchases of jewelry and bars and coins declined even more dramatically, essentially offsetting the inflows from ETFs. As prices rose, reaching $1,481 per ounce in the fourth quarter, the highest since 2013, consumers in weaker economies like China and India backed away.

“Global ETF demand will continue to drive prices,” Colas added. With the economies of China and India at a standstill and slowing, respectively, “it will be up to financial market investors to pick up the slack of lower jewelry/coin/bar demand. Given macro uncertainty at present (and ever-lower sovereign debt yields), it is reasonable to expect that they will.”

Gold












GCJ20, +0.19%










has gained 2.1% in the year to date, about the same as the S&P 500












SPX, +1.50%.










 

The top seven gold ETFs by assets under management are noted below.

Fund name, ticker Assets Expense ratio 12-month return
SPDR Gold Trust












GLD, -1.30%










 
$45.2 billion 0.40% 19.68%
iShares Gold Trust












IAU, -1.33%










 
$18.55 billion 0.25% 19.9%
Aberdeen Standard Physical Gold Shares












SGOL, -1.38%










 
$1.33 billion 0.17% 19.97%
SPDR Gold MiniShares Trust












GLDM, -1.40%










 
$1.22 billion 0.18% 19.91%
GraniteShares Gold Shares












BAR, -1.46%










 
$627.6 million 0.175% 20.05%
VanEck Merk Gold Trust












OUNZ, -1.36%










 
$196.9 million 0.40% 19.74%
Perth Mint Physical Gold ETF












AAAU, -1.40%










 
$188.8 million 0.18% 19.89%
Source: FactSet

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