Crazy Market Thoughts: Only Half the Story
In a recent interview conducted by Jeff Clark of Casey Research and self-declared as The Best Gold Interview of 2010, Andy Schectman of Miles Franklin discusses the future supply situation in the retail bullion market. Unfortunately, most people who have been around the block in the gold market will not find his views to be particularly insightful or surprising so we’d like to spice things up a bit by adding our own contrarian arguments and twisted perspective.
Among Mr. Schectman’s not-very-extraordinary claims is that the apparent shortage of gold and silver bullion and the resulting premiums that arose during the financial crisis in 2008 were caused by extremely strong demand from panicked retail buyers. Mr. Schectman then warns us that we should expect more retail shortages in the future. We can’t really argue with his logic but we believe he is only telling half the story given that many dealers were in fact rationing their existing inventories as a result of low bullion prices. Simply put, the dealers were unwilling to sell the shelves bare at prices so terribly low.
While it is true that bullion dealers are running a business like everybody else, most of them are also gold (and/or silver) bugs and consequently have much of their wealth sunk into their business in the form of bullion inventory. That way when the eventual and inevitable price spike to $5,000 gold and $500 silver comes, they can sell it all and retire as billionaires. This might not be the case for the large corporation-style dealers or the tiny numismatic coin shop mom-ann-pops but there are a lot of dealers between those two extremes. Their inventories are typically not hedged or only slightly so. More to the point, these dealers are expecting the big score along the way and would only sell out at a loss under desperate circumstances.
So, what’s our point? That retail demand is only half the story: even without it, we’d see dealer inventories disappear during severe price declines. Consequently, we won’t share Mr. Schectman’s enthusiasm unless we see widespread, sustained retail shortages while gold and silver trade at record high prices. Call us crazy if you must, but so far the shortages during high prices have been regional or of very limited duration. And while logic dictates this will not always be the case, logic is not the same thing as reality.
One instance of reality is that the bull market peak in late 1979 and early 1980 brought a veritable flood of retail selling even while buying was at record levels as well. The retail selling was significant enough at times that many bullion products didn’t command a premium but rather sold at a discount. The highest bidder was often the refinery. With the purported market price of silver near $50 per ounce, for example, junk bags of 90% U.S. silver coins exchanged hands at a price closer to $30. Not coincidentally, that $30 also happened to be the melt price the refineries were paying dealers. Many a bag of old U.S. silver coins, not to mention bona fide numismatics including rare Morgan silver dollars, thus met their end in the Great Silver Melt of 1980. In fact, the “best” form of bullion to have owned during that bull market peak was actually COMEX deliverable bars since they could be sold (by futures exchange for physicals) at the same price that COMEX futures contracts were trading. Indeed, only people holding COMEX deliverable bars had a reliable chance to cash in anywhere near $50 silver or $850 gold during the 1980 peak.
This time around the situation could prove to be radically different — sellers will probably not be lining up in droves in front of dealer shops — but it might be because of something that Mr. Schectman does not mention: the development of “P2P” exchanges such as the auction site eBay that could eventually cut dealers completely out of the secondary market. So far these retail exchanges have been a mere annoyance to the dealers although sometimes you can find dealers who will sell and even buy on eBay. Such retail exchanges could, however, eventually dominate the secondary bullion market especially if we are to believe the outrage from gold dealers about the “hidden tax” in the recently enacted health care legislation.
Indeed, we find it difficult to reconcile dealer complaints about the new transaction reporting requirements with Mr. Schectman’s suggestion that going forward there will be little if any supply available from retail sellers. If that were true, there should be little actual impact from a new “tax law” that requires virtually all bullion purchases from the public to be reported by dealers to the Internal Revenue Service. It appears to us that either the complaining dealers are right or Andy Schectman is right.
Alternatively, they could both be telling only half the story: the likely outcome is an acceleration of the secondary bullion market’s transition to P2P bullion exchanges that offer retail investors the most privacy, the widest selection and the best prices. If so, generic auction services like eBay are likely to be joined by several new offerings in the near future while recent P2P applications dedicated to the bullion market such as SeekBullion and the Nucleo Exchange at Bullion Direct are likely to expand significantly. For this to happen, however, there is a need for independent bullion escrowing and verification services that enable trusted transactions to take place between individuals while avoiding new transaction reporting requirements. Another option would be P2P exchanges being set up within member-based organizations where escrow and verification could be handled internally.
A credit union can, for example, set up a private bullion exchange for its members and even Metal Augmentor can set up a private bullion exchange for our subscribers. All it would take is a very simple software platform (even a user forum or mailing list would suffice), a basic template for the business process and some training in bullion authentication. In fact, we’ve already drafted a conceptual business plan on the back of a napkin and would be willing to work with anyone interested in developing it into a viable business opportunity. There’s probably not much money to be made initially but it is exceedingly simple and would help ensure a healthy secondary bullion market in the U.S. (or any other country for that matter). After all, gold and silver need to be more widely owned and must also be exchanged from time to time instead of merely accumulated and hoarded as a prerequisite to their acceptance in future monetary regimes.
It’s a pipe dream to think that any kind of gold standard could reappear without the public first becoming reacclimated to gold and silver and the best way to do that is often to just let people simply hold a gold coin or silver bar. We don’t see bullion dealers, many of whom are “out there” in terms of political thought, conspiracy mongering or ethics (we’re thinking of Goldline International in particular since they specifically target their aggressive upsell to people who are unfamiliar with bullion), as being effective tour guides to introduce the public to the marvels of gold and silver. Grassroots P2P exchanges potentially can, however, be an excellent introductory mechanism, especially as long as GATA and other agenda-driven organizations can manage to keep their paws off.
The other thing we think will start happening more and more is gold and silver bullion being used in private transactions. This actually became fairly common in the late 1970s and early 1980s so there is some precedent for it. We suspect it is only a matter of time before something like this is no longer uncommon in the classifieds or Craigslist: “Boat for Sale. 1998 Sea Ray 17 footer, perfect condition with trailer. Price: 3 Gold Eagles, firm.”
In conclusion, we see a bit of a silver lining in the new transaction reporting regulations “hidden” in the new health care law and we welcome the possibility that dealer involvement in the secondary bullion market could evaporate soon.
Sorry, I’m not buying it. First, most (major) online dealers are hedged, their bottom line is based on premiums not spot price of Ag. Secondly, even before silver started its rapid decline, we saw shortages start just under $20 / ounce, I recall that a certain dealer’s website had crashed due to the amount of traffic and the servers were overwhelmed. Thirdly, some dealers had even shut down or were not taking *pre-orders*, whereas some dealers were taking pre-orders and the turnaround time was up to 3 months. So to say dealers were just removing Ag from the shelf is erroneous (would only apply to the ‘mom and pop’ shop) who were not hedged and that smack-down could have wiped them out.
Yes the major online dealers are obviously hedged for a portion of their inventory and so their main concern would have been replacing inventory instead of also taking large losses. It’s not possible to know the real numbers involved but it is probably some of both (dealers selling out and at the same time withdrawing inventory especially near the price lows). Having said what you have about hedging, please don’t come back later and say that there is no reason for commercial short positions on the COMEX!
As for “shortages start just under $20/ounce”, that is strange given the crash actually started from UNDER $18 and didn’t really get under way until silver was under $16, at which point the dealer inventories were still quite healthy. A few days later silver hit $12 and then traded between $8-12 for a couple of months, and it was during this time that it was very difficult to find any inventory.
The “pre-orders” are irrelevant since they are in the primary market and always going to be hedged and committed. We are talking about secondary market where the dealer actually has to hedge its own inventory.
That said, am I overstating the scenario? Probably. But I will stand by the point that the time to get excited is when dealer shelves are bare while metal prices are rising instead of falling.
@silverax
Thanks for the reply (no I won’t get into the COMEX, completely different vehicle). If I recall back in ‘08, after Silver peaked @ 21.35, and started bouncing around the 20’s, dealers such as Apmex, Bullion - Direct, Tulving, ColoradoGold were pretty much empty across the board, the real strange thing was prices were in a vicious decline yet premiums were in some cases (i.e. ASE’s) $7 / $8 above spot. The Mom and Pop shops I do not considder a factor, and as for pulling silver off the shelves (due to the decline) waiting for prices to rally, given Silver’s notorious 30 year bear market (for lack of better description), who is to say that prices wouldn’t stay flat again for lengthy period of time…those mom and pop shops make a living buying and selling, unless they can afford to close up shop indefinitely, pulling metal out because of falling prices is not how to run a PM shop. The real focus should be on the big retailers, who are hedged, prices are irrevelant to these guys and if their cupboards are bare, then I would take it as what it is, a real silver shortage (albeit temporarily)…but the takeaway of all this is how quickly the shortage occurred, and there were reports the shortage was not just in the domestic space but also in europe and other countries, it almost literally happened overnight, given the sensitive nature of the economy, geopolitical ramifications, it would not take much to spark another one, whereas retail could turn into a commercial shortage (which is what I expect to occur as more investors start piling into physical).