Calgary Herald

Virus lockdown ripples through gold markets

- JACK FARCHY AND JUSTINA VASQUEZ

The gold market is creaking, in the latest sign of how the novel coronaviru­s pandemic is causing chaos across financial markets.

Just as demand for the metal soars with investors seeking a safe haven from unpreceden­ted economic turmoil, a glitch has appeared in the global market. The price of gold in New York and London has diverged by the most in four decades after lockdowns and grounded planes strangled the supply routes that allow physical gold to move around the globe.

The strains have rippled through gold trading, with liquidity at some points running thin in a vast market that’s dominated by the world’s biggest banks and watched by millions of mom-and-pop investors.

Banks and traders typically ship gold around the world on commercial flights, linking the trading hubs of London and New York with vaults and refineries in Switzerlan­d, Hong Kong and Singapore. But as the coronaviru­s grounds flights and refineries shut down, it’s becoming harder to trade between global markets. Silver and other precious metal markets are also being disrupted by the logistics lockdown.

“This isn’t anything that we’ve seen in a generation because refiners never had to shut down — not in war, not in the great financial crisis, not in natural disasters,” Tai Wong, the head of metals derivative­s trading at BMO Capital Markets, said by phone. “It’s never happened. And it happened astonishin­gly rapidly.”

At issue is whether there will be enough gold in New York to deliver against futures contracts traded on the Comex, which is owned by CME Group Inc. While the larger spot market in London is dominated by 400-ounce bars of gold, only 100-ounce and kilobars are deliverabl­e on the Comex contract.

CME has taken some steps to try to address the squeeze.

Gold futures on the Comex in New York shot to the highest premium to the London spot price in four decades on Tuesday. By midday on Wednesday, the difference had dropped to around US$15 an ounce. The skyrocketi­ng spread between New York and London gold price underscore­s how desperate investors are to find a safe haven amid the market tumult brought on by the virus.

Late on Tuesday, CME Group said it would rush the launch of a new gold futures contract under which 400-ounce bars would also be deliverabl­e. The move offers a way to address the squeeze, if holders of Comex futures are willing to exchange for the new contract.

“This new contract will provide customers with maximum flexibilit­y in managing physical delivery,” said Derek Sammann, senior managing director and global head of commodity and options products at CME, citing “unpreceden­ted market conditions.”

As of Tuesday, open interest in the April gold contract stood at 152,000 contracts, equivalent to 15.2 million ounces, but total deliverabl­e stocks in Comex warehouses were just over half that.

Gold futures for June delivery climbed as much as 7.7 per cent in New York on Tuesday and at their peak had a Us$67.57-an-ounce premium over spot prices in London. Based on closing prices going back to the mid-1970s, the biggest spread between a most-active contract and spot gold was US$67 in 1980, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

On Wednesday, most-active futures for June delivery were down 1.6 per cent at US$1,637 an ounce at midday in New York.

On Tuesday, the spread between the April and June contracts on the Comex traded as high as US$20 an ounce — an indication of the level of the squeeze. By Wednesday afternoon, the April contract was trading at a slight discount, suggesting that the peak tightness may have eased for now.

Ordinarily, banks and traders would ship supplies from refineries in Switzerlan­d or Asia, which manufactur­e 100-ounce and kilobars for their investor clients, to New York in response to such a large Comex premium. But because of the outbreak, some have been reluctant to take advantage of the arbitrage out of fear that flights and truck deliveries will be cancelled and trap their supplies, according to one senior trader, who asked not to be identified because the informatio­n isn’t public.

 ?? STEFAN WERMUTH/BLOOMBERG ?? As COVID-19 grounds flights and refineries close, gold and other precious metal markets are being disrupted.
STEFAN WERMUTH/BLOOMBERG As COVID-19 grounds flights and refineries close, gold and other precious metal markets are being disrupted.

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