![Global sales of semiconductors crossed above 400 billion for fisrt time in 2017](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAP///wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==)
If you live in Texas and have any extra gold bars, coins and/or jewelry lying around that need safekeeping, you’re in luck. The Texas Bullion Depository, the first of its kind in the U.S., officially opened to the public in Austin this week, putting a cap on three years of planning and construction. The private firm managing the facility, Lone Star Tangible Assets, calls it the “world’s most advanced depository.”
This is wonderful news. Because Texas is such a trend-setting state, it might encourage other states to look into creating their own depositories. It also has the potential to attract even more investors to precious metals, which I believe are crucial components of any well diversified portfolio. As I’ve shown before, gold has little to no correlation with other assets such as equities, cash and Treasuries.
That makes the yellow metal especially favorable—now more than at any time since the financial crisis. We’re in the second longest economic expansion since World War II, and some experts see another recession as soon as 2020. A new survey by the National Association for Business Economics (NABE) finds that half a panel of 45 “professional forecasters” believe the next recession could occur between the fourth quarter of 2019 and the second quarter of 2020.
Although I don’t necessarily agree with this assessment, it’s important to recognize the risks and headwinds and prepare accordingly.
“Troubled” Deutsche Has $1.7 Trillion in Assets
Among the most headline-worthy risks is the uncertain survival of Deutsche Bank. Shares of Germany’s biggest lender have plummeted following a first quarter report showing net income fell some 80 percent from a year ago, as well as news that the Federal Reserve downgraded the bank’s U.S. operations to “troubled.”
![could deutsche bank be another lehman](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAP///wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==)
Many analysts are already making the dubious comparison between Deutsche and Lehman Brothers, the storied American financial services firm whose bankruptcy nearly 10 years ago set off the global financial crisis. At the time of its filing, Lehman had approximately $639 billion in assets. As of the end of last year, Deutsche controlled more than double that amount—$1.7 trillion—meaning its failure could be catastrophic to global financial markets.
Ideas are currently being floated to save the distressed bank, including a German government bailout and a merger with rival Commerzbank, but nothing is guaranteed.
Record Student Debt
Something else I’m keeping my eye on is the ever-growing mountain of government and household debt. Howard Schultz, the outgoing billionaire executive chairman of Starbucks, told CNBC this week that he considered national debt to be the greatest threat to the U.S.
“I think the greatest threat domestically to the country is this $21 trillion debt hanging over the cloud of America and future generations,” Schultz said, adding to speculation that the former Starbucks chief is considering a presidential run in 2020.
I couldn’t agree more with Schultz on this point. I should add that higher interest rates are making servicing this debt even more costly than it already is. No one is off the hook.
Household debt is also ballooning out of control, and today, student loan debt stands at more than $1.5 trillion. Student debt is now the largest form of debt in the U.S. after mortgages. It’s bigger than auto loan debt and credit card debt. Even more alarming is that an estimated 20 percent of borrowers right now are behind on their payments.
![US outstanding student loan debt now stands at 1.5 trillion dollars](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAP///wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==)
Negative Interest Rates in America?
Between Deutsche and student debt, the implications are enormous. They also highlight my recommendation that investors have approximately 10 percent in gold, with half of that in physical bullion and the other half in high-quality gold mining stocks, mutual funds and ETFs.
As I said earlier, the investment case for gold is highly appealing right now. Should another recession happen anytime soon, the Federal Reserve at present would be hamstrung to offer monetary accommodation.
That’s according to a recent post by my colleague James Rickards, who writes that it’s historically taken between 3 percent and 5 percent in interest rate cuts to pull the U.S. out of a recession.
The problem with this is that the federal funds rate currently sits at 1.75 percent. You do the math.
Were a recession to strike tomorrow, the Fed would have very little wiggle room to ease monetary policy. It could cut rates exactly 1.75 percent, but then it would hit zero and “be out of bullets,” as Rickards says.
Of course, the Fed could dip rates into negative territory, which—in theory—should spur consumer spending. Better to spend your cash on that new boat, the thinking goes, than be punished for letting it sit in the bank. But there’s evidence negative rates haven’t worked as expected to prop up the economies that have experimented with them—notably Japan, Switzerland, Sweden and the eurozone.
And because there’s really no easier way to destroy wealth than with negative interest rates, I would expect gold investment demand to get a massive jolt.
This is precisely why German investors have quietly become the world’s biggest buyers of gold. Until recently, Germany wasn’t known as a nation of gold bugs. But following the financial crisis, the European Central Bank (ECB) slashed rates, and banks began charging customers to hold their cash. Yields on German bonds went subzero. Today, the five-year bond will cost you more than 20 basis points.
For many Germans, the only reliable store of value was gold. Investors ploughed as much as $8 billion into gold coins, bars and exchange-traded commodities in 2016, the most recent year of available data. Demand for safety deposit boxes surged.
I’m curious to see if the same will happen at the Texas Bullion Depository.
Gold ETFs Have Attracted $1 Billion a Month So Far in 2018
The latest report from the World Gold Council (WGC) shows that inflows into global gold ETFs in May were mostly solid. European gold funds grew by 26 metric tons, or $1.2 billion, as geopolitical uncertainty weakened the euro against the dollar. And in Asia, gold ETFs rose by 21 metric tons, or $862 million, a phenomenal 20 percent increase from the previous month. These gains were offset somewhat by net outflows from North American funds as a strong U.S. dollar pushed the price of gold below $1,300 an ounce.
So far this year, gold ETFs have attracted nearly $5 billion, or approximately $1 billion per month.
![gold ETF flows were strong in may despite subdued metal prices](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAP///wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==)
This pace can be maintained for the rest of year, I believe, especially now that it looks as if the U.S. dollar has peaked. Since its 2018 high on May 29, the greenback has already lost close to 1.5 percent. This affords gold more upside potential as we head closer to Diwali and the Indian wedding season, when gifts of gold jewelry are considered auspicious.
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Gold Market
This week spot gold closed at $1,298.94, up $5.21 per ounce, or 0.40 percent. Gold stocks, as measured by the NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index, ended the week higher by 0.40 percent. Junior-tiered stocks outperformed seniors for the week, as the S&P/TSX Venture Index rose 1.21 percent. The U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar sunk lower this week by 0.64 percent, marking its second consecutive weekly decline since the end of January.
Date |
Event |
Survey |
Actual |
Prior |
Jun-4 |
Durable Goods Orders |
-- |
-- |
-1.7% |
Jun-7 |
Initial Jobless Claims |
220k |
222k |
223k |
Jun-12 |
Germany ZEW Survey Current Situation |
86.0 |
-- |
87.4 |
Jun-12 |
Germany ZEW Survey Expectations |
-12.7 |
-- |
-8.2 |
Jun-12 |
CPI YoY |
2.7% |
-- |
2.5% |
Jun-13 |
PPI Final Demand YoY |
2.9% |
-- |
2.6% |
Jun-13 |
FOMC Rate Decision (Upper Bound) |
2.0% |
-- |
1.75% |
Jun-13 |
China Retail Sales YoY |
9.6% |
-- |
9.4% |
Jun-14 |
Germany CPI YoY |
2.2% |
-- |
2.2% |
Jun-14 |
ECB Main Refinancing Rate |
0.000% |
-- |
0.000% |
Jun-14 |
Initial Jobless Claims |
222k |
-- |
222k |
Jun-15 |
Eurozone CPI Core YoY |
1.1% |
-- |
1.1% |
Strengths
- The best performing metal this week was silver, up 2.24 percent. A majority of gold traders were either bullish or neutral on bullion this week after being mostly bullish last week due to political uncertainty in Europe, according to the weekly Bloomberg survey. India saw a third straight session of high gold prices due to continued buying by local jewelers with prices hovering around $1,300 internationally.
- Silver saw five straight days of gains, and holdings in ETFs climbed 0.7 percent in two days, leading to the metal outperforming gold. This week saw the biggest weekly gain for silver since April 20, and demand is rising 2 percent year-over-year, according to Bloomberg. Adrian Ash, director of research at BullionVault, said, “With precious metals looking so boring across the spectrum, silver has the most attractive volatility outlook. There’s a lot more gas left in the tank for silver as funds are likely to all switch to net-long positions in the coming weeks.”
![silver outshining gold price raio to mean revert after hitting highest since 2016](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAP///wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==)
- European gold-backed ETFs added 25.6 tons of gold last month, joining Asian ETFs in recording inflows for the month, according to the World Gold Council (WGC). Juan Carlos Artigas, director of investment research at the WGC, said that “political turmoil in Italy has helped drive a second consecutive month of inflows into European gold ETFs, reversing declines from earlier this year.”
Weaknesses
- The worst performing metal this week was platinum, up 0.35 percent. Indian gold imports have declined for the fifth straight month and shrank 39 percent in the month of May. India is the world’s second largest consumer of gold, and summer is historically a weaker period for demand. Perth Mint gold coin and bar sales declined to 14,800 ounces in May, the lowest level since April 2017 and down from 15,161 ounces in April.
- Gold is at its cheapest relative to copper this year, which points to signs that investor optimism on global economic growth is slowing demand for bullion as a safe-haven asset, writes Bloomberg. The yellow metal is also headed for its first quarterly loss in a year. Commodity ETFs saw big outflows of funds this week, led by precious metals ETFs that saw $1.02 billion in redemptions. This is up significantly compared to the previous week’s withdrawal of $379 million.
- Bloomberg reports that Odey Asset Management has asked the U.K. securities regulator to stop Barrick Gold from voting on a deal they are negotiating for Acacia Mining, of which Barrick is a majority shareholder. Odey believes that it would be a conflict of interest for Barrick to vote on the deal, since it is currently working to resolve a dispute with the Tanzanian government. BlackRock, which is Acacia’s biggest minority shareholder, also asked Barrick to recuse themselves from any vote on the deal. Barrick responded that it does intend to exercise its rights to vote.
Opportunities
- According to Bart Melek, global head of commodity strategy at TD Securities, gold is set to shrug off its two straight months of declines and rise to $1,400 per ounce in 2019 on dollar weakness. Melek said that “as we move into 2019, the U.S. dollar will weaken, which is a very powerful fuel for the gold complex.”
- The dollar could be entering a corrective phase, according to Brown Brothers Harriman (BHH), due to its inability to rally on the back on a constructive jobs report and a re-pricing of the trajectory of Federal Reserve policy. BHH also writes that current U.S. trade practices and the weaponization of access to dollar funding could spark a change in the dollar’s status as a reserve currency and that the U.S. is moving away from the very multilateral trade system that they helped create.
- Fed rate hikes might not affect gold as much as we think. Bullion falls before a decision and rises after a decision has been announced, which is good for gold considering that the market has priced another round of tightening next week, writes Eddie van der Walt of Bloomberg. Gold equities might be safer than gold itself given that the Philadelphia Stock Exchange Gold and Silver Index, which includes the biggest gold miners, has outperformed physical gold in the month of May by nearly 400 basis points.
Threats
- Torsten Slok, chief international economist at Deutsche Bank, says the danger of newly implemented tariffs could be serious if it hurts business confidence and causes executives to put off capital spending and other investment decisions. Ten auto executives met with President Trump last month to discuss several issues, and just weeks after the Commerce Department began investigating whether or not imported cars threaten U.S national security and are now considering tariffs of as much as 25 percent. Brian Smith, Hyundai Motor America’s chief operating officer, said in an interview that “the scary thing is there seems to be a lot of conversation around import-based companies and not even much realization that there’s a huge amount of vehicles produced here by international companies.”
- CreditSights strategists Glenn Reynolds and Kevin Chun wrote in a note this week that the ratio between U.S. junk-bond yields and their high-grade counterparts have reached levels that “hearken back to the high risk appetite days of October 1997 and June 2007,” just before market downturns. CreditSights worries that event risks such as global trade and Italian political instability could cause things to worsen.
- China decided last week to scale back its subsidies on solar energy, due to massive increases in adoption. Installed capacity surged from 3.1 gigawatts (GW) in 2011 to 135.6 GW in 2017. According to Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF), China’s national renewable subsidy fund had a deficiency of an estimated $19 billion at the end of 2017. This could be a headwind to silver consumption since it is used in the process of creating solar panels.
China Region
Strengths
- China’s purchasing manager’s index (PMI) remains strong. China’s Caixin Services reading came in right in line with analysts’ expectations at 52.9. This means that China’s overall Caixin PMI situation was about in line, even as (if you will recall) the official PMI readings last week actually beat expectations.
![China may purchsaing manager index data](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAP///wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==)
- Taiwan’s exports number for the May measurement period beat expectations, coming in at a 14.2 percent year-over-year growth rate. This is better than the anticipated 12.0 percent pace. Imports also came in higher, at 12.0 percent and ahead of an anticipated 9.0 percent pace.
- China’s imports and exports both came in higher than expectations this week, as exports rose 12.6 percent year-over-year for the May period, thus beating 11.1 percent expectations. Meanwhile, exports climbed 26.0 percent, well ahead of analysts’ anticipated 18.0 percent pace.
Weaknesses
- Energy was the weakest sector in the Hang Seng Composite Index over the last week, falling 1.77 percent in that time.
- The Nikkei Hong Kong Manufacturing PMI came in weaker than the prior month’s reading, clocking in at only 47.8, down from April’s 49.1.
- While China’s Foreign Reserves number clocked in a little better than expected at $3.111 trillion, the number was actually down from last month’s $3.125 trillion, due at least in part to a weaker yuan of late. The weaker number is thus not a major surprise, and again, actually beat expectations, so don’t read too much into it—just be aware that it constitutes the second month of declines in absolute numbers of reserves.
Opportunities
- The upcoming North Korea summit remains a major potential opportunity, as does any thaw or firm progress in U.S.-China trade relations.
- Tencent Holdings Ltd. (700 HK) and automaker Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd. (175 HK) are collectively purchasing a 49 percent stake in Bullet Train Network Technology Co., which is the Wi-Fi unit of China’s state-owned bullet-train operator. The investment comes as the state seeks broadened ownership structures and private investors for some of its state-owned companies and subsidiaries. Chinese policy-makers have already announced plans to expand the high-speed rail grid to 30,000 kilometers from 25,000 kilometers by the end of the decade, according to Bloomberg News.
- The World Cup draws nigh, but only South Korea qualified from the Asia-ex-Japan crowd. There remains a lot of growth potential for the beautiful game in Asia. So if you need a team (in this bizarre World Cup, even teams like Italy, the Netherlands, and the United States failed to qualify), and you love Asia-ex-Japan, then consider rooting for South Korea! Some of the most storied winners of the past are expected to come out strong again this year (think Brazil, Germany, Spain, France, and Argentina as favorites to win the Cup), and South Korea will face some extremely tough competition to advance beyond the group stage: the round-robin group stage involves squaring up against not only the defending champion Germany but also Mexico and Sweden. Good luck to South Korea in the upcoming FIFA 2018 World Cup!
Threats
- As much as the North Korea summit and the issue of U.S.-China trade relations remain relevant opportunities, so too they can quickly sour to threats—whether real or perceived, it ought to be added—should things go awry.
- China’s Shanghai Composite is trading just a hair off its 52 week lows.
- Indonesia’s foreign exchange reserves declined to the lowest level in 14 months, Bloomberg reports, after the country’s central bank tapped it to buffer the rupiah from an EM selloff. Indonesia’s central bank has already put the possibility of further hikes on the table.
Emerging Europe
Strengths
- Hungary was the best performing country this week, gaining 2.2 percent. Strong economic data supported equites trading on the Budapest exchange. Gross domestic product (GDP), for the end of the first quarter, was confirmed at 4.4 percent. Industrial production picked up in April, and May inflation spiked to 2.8 percent from the prior reading of 2.3 percent.
- The Turkish lira was the best performing currency this week, gaining 4.2 percent against the dollar. The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey unexpectedly hiked rates 125 basis points. The big question now is whether more orthodox policymaking lasts beyond this month’s elections.
- The health care sector was the best performing among eastern European markets this week.
Weaknesses
- Turkey was the worst performing country this week, losing 3.3 percent. Despite the lira appreciating against the dollar, equites trading on the Istanbul exchange sold off. Moody downgraded 17 Turkish banks and placed them on review for further downgrade.
- The Russian ruble was the worst performing currency this week, losing 23 basis points against the dollar. Brent crude oil was down 50 basis points, closing at $76.41 per barrel. The Central Bank of Russia will meet next week and decide on its key policy rate. Russian inflation has been reported at 2.4 percent, despite sharp ruble depreciation in the month of April after U.S. imposed new sanctions on Russia. The Emerging Europe Economics research team predicts the rate to be cut to 6 percent by year-end. The key rate stands at 7.25 percent.
![stable inflation will allow central bank of russia to cut policy rate even further](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAP///wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==)
- Consumer staples was the worst performing sector among eastern European markets this week.
Opportunities
- The German finance minister, Olaf Scholz, endorsed Chancellor Angela Merkel’s plan to create European investment system that could invest in financially weaker eurozone member states. The fund size has not been announced yet, but it could be in the low tens of billions of euros. The Netherlands, one of the largest per capita contributors to the European Union budget, opposes any increase in European spending.
- Central and Eastern Europe’s industrial real estate is booming, according to the Wall Street Journal. Warehouses and distribution facilities are being added in countries like Poland and the Czech Republic, due to the low cost of construction and cheap labor. Rents for modern industrial space in Poznan, Poland are about 3.5 euros ($4.09) a square meter compared with 5 euros a square meter in Berlin, just 170 miles to the west. Amazon.com operates five centers in Poland along its border with Germany and plans further expansion.
- President Vladimir Putin wants Russia to become a top-five global economy by 2024, with economic growth rates exceeding those of most countries and inflation at a level not above 4 percent. To accomplish this, the government will focus on technology innovation and digitalization for the next couple of years. Already, several of Russia’s largest technology companies have teamed up in order to transform the Russian online market. Yandex has partnered with Sberbank to further develop the already existing Yandex, an online market platform, which has the potential to become the Russian “Amazon”.
Threats
- The euro rebounded to a two-week high on Thursday on bets that the European Central Bank (ECB) may signal a stimulus unwind during next week’s meeting on June 14th. It looks as if the ECB is determined to press on with normalization despite the political uncertainty in Italy. If the debate on whether to end QE will not take place next week during the ECB meeting, the euro and equites could fall.
- Bloomberg cited an official in the French president's office, who said France won't sign a joint G7 statement without major concessions from the U.S. The official added President Emmanuel Macron has signaled that progress was needed on tariffs, the Iran nuclear agreement and the Paris climate accord before he is willing to sign a joint statement. The report highlighted that Macron has concluded that the other members of the G7—the U.K., Germany, Japan, France, Italy and Canada—must stand up to the U.S.
- Russia’s central bank warned that more than two in five of the country lenders would have a capital shortfall if the price of oil declined to $25 a barrel. More than 40 percent of Russian banks lost their licenses between 2014 and 2017, when the price of oil corrected sharply. Even now, the central bank continues to clean the Russian banking sector, closing 27 more lenders this year through the end of April. Out of 534 Russian lenders, 224 will be in trouble if oil falls abruptly. Brent oil closed at $76 on Friday.
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