GOFO
LBMA to stop reporting GOFO rates from February 2015 onwards
Well, we got notice that LBMA will stop reporting the GOFO rates from February 2015 onwards. The reason being that gold swaps are out of fashion these days, who wants to borrow gold?
This will give a green sign for all the gold manipulators.
GOFO rates hit record lows
1 month GOFO:
6 month GOFO rolling over:
A lot of stress building up in physical gold when you look at lease rates. Look how the different maturities now converge together. This typically is a sign of a bottom.
LBMA Might Stop Reporting GOFO Rates
The Gold Forward Offered Rate (GOFO), the equivalent of LIBOR for the gold market, is used as a benchmark for dealers, central banks and others to swap gold for U.S. dollars with miners who may need gold to meet contracts or investors for short-selling and other purposes.
The LBMA already stopped reporting silver forward rates in November 2012 and are now contemplating if they shouldn’t stop reporting the gold forward rates. You can see on the chart below from Kitco what happened to the silver lease rates at that time. The same outcome is expected now for the GOFO rates which are now reported on a daily basis at the LBMA here. The LBMA currently sets GOFO each day by polling its eight major bank dealers on the rates at which they are prepared to lend gold. This could be ending and will make the obvious gold manipulation less transparent for us to spot out.
Continue to read here.
Correlation: GOFO rate Vs. Gold Price
It seems that whenever the GOFO rates go up (and they release it at 12:00 PM Belgian time), then the gold price goes up when the U.S. stock market opens.
See how the GOFO rate and gold price correlate to each other.
1 Month GOFO |
GLD: gold price |
So technically you can predict the price swing in gold by just watching the LBMA GOFO rate before the U.S. stock market opens.
Gold Backwardation Gets More Extreme
GOFO |
Run on GLD Starting at Decade Low GOFO Rates
Today the SGE withdrawals of gold fell again 16% from last week to only 21.4615 tonnes, see chart below courtesy of Koos Jansen: In gold we trust. So demand for gold in China is really dropping fast as premiums between China and London are still at zero, indicating that demand for gold from China is very unnaturally low.
However, the GLD ETF had something interesting to tell. The GLD physical stock finally started dropping hard since yesterday, while I had thought it would start increasing.
GOFO rates are now very negative historically hitting new lows. Maybe this tells us that GLD is finally having a run on gold due to supply tightness. Because China isn’t buying, so who is actually taking delivery from GLD now? Maybe the retail investors themselves, demanding for the physical. I’m just guessing around, could also just be storage fee payments.
Long Term GOFO Rate Hits New Low
Let’s zoom in to 2009-2014: We have a new solid low here.
So not only the short term GOFO rates (1 month to 3 months) are negative now, also the long term GOFO rates are hitting new lows. So there is a tremendous stress building in the gold market. Historically negative GOFO rates are bottoms in the gold price.
This makes me very bullish in gold at this moment. Because gold lease rates are now much higher than the interest rates/bond yields. This indicates to me that the bond market is about to collapse, bond yields will be going higher, because gold lease rates cannot be higher than the corresponding bond yields. Either bond yields will be going up, or gold has to go up. It’s one of the two.
On another note, we see that the Federal Reserve tapering, is actually just talk. Because some entity is buying U.S. bonds via Belgium at a rate of 30-40 billion USD a month, which is exactly how much tapering we have had. The Federal Reserve is throwing sand in our eyes, don’t be fooled. They are propping up the U.S. bond market, artificially lowering the bond yields below the gold lease rates.
U.S. debt held by Belgium (Billion USD) |
Gold Backwardation Explained By James Turk
If you want to know what gold backwardation means, read this article of James Turk. Very interesting.
Let’s say we have two currencies A (euro) and B (USD). Then the following is true:
– A’s interest rate < B's interest rate
– A is in contango against B
– A’s value rises going into the future
– Higher interest rates means a higher risk of debasement of the currency.
Now let’s look at two other currencies A (USD) and B (gold):
– USD’s interest rate < gold's interest rate (lease rate)
– USD is in contango against gold (or gold is in backwardation)
– USD’s value rises going into the future (or gold’s value declines going into the future = negative GOFO)
– Higher interest rates means a higher risk of debasement of the currency.
Now gold’s interest rate is higher than the USD’s interest rate. Which means gold has a higher risk of debasement than the USD. This is virtually impossible because gold cannot be debased.
Which means something has to give. This is a rare event and will mark a bottom in the gold price.
Red Alert: Gold Forward Rates Turn Negative
Chart 1: LBMA GOFO rate turns negative |
And the subsequent rise in lease rates: