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'Free money' for banks as investors pile into fractured gold market

Wednesday, 23 September 2020


Banks are making vast profits from gold as investors flood into a market fractured by the coronavirus crisis, reports Reuters.
The world's largest 50 investment banks are on track to double their income from precious metals this year to around $2.5 billion, most of it from gold, Coalition, a banking consultancy, told the news agency.
"$1.2 billion was the earnings pool last year. This year we already crossed that number," said Coalition research director Amrit Shahani.
The juicy rewards, which have not previously been reported, mark a stunning reversal of fortune for bullion banks. In March, some had to wipe hundreds of millions of dollars off their trading books as the global pandemic snarled the supply of gold bars.
That disruption sowed the seeds for the current bonanza.
Stung by the losses, many big banks lowered their trading limits on the Comex exchange in New York, the biggest gold futures market, creating a lack of liquidity that pushed prices there above prices in London, the main hub for trading physical gold, and elsewhere.
The divergence created a lucrative opportunity for banks, who have the infrastructure to buy metal outside the United States and deliver it to New York to profit on the difference, especially during a pandemic, when investor demand has pushed gold prices to record levels of around $2,000 an ounce.
Reduced trading by large banks also drove prices of later-dated futures far above near-dated ones-an opportunity for those with gold to sell it forward for more than enough money to cover the cost of storage and capital.
The confluence of events has created a boom in profits on Comex, 13 sources at banks, brokers and funds told the news agency.
"It's free money," said an executive at one of the largest bullion-trading banks.
Even banks that reduced activity on Comex are making more money there than before, industry players said, none of whom was authorised to speak to the media.
"It's double the profit on half the position," a second banker said.
Banks, some hedge funds and asset managers that did little or no business on Comex have stepped up their activity, sources said and data from CME Group, which runs the Comex exchange, showed.
CME provides little data showing activity of individual actors on its market, but numbers that are available show banks including Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Citi have ramped up trade in gold in vaults registered with the exchange in recent months, either delivering metal or accepting bars which they can sell forward.
Lenders such as Wells Fargo, BNP Paribas, Royal Bank of Canada and Barclays have also made or taken deliveries of gold against futures contracts after long periods of little or no activity.
With profits running high, not only from Comex but also from trading, financing and storing gold outside the futures exchange, some banks are hiring. Deutsche Bank is adding a third person to its recently revived precious metals team, four sources said.
Citi, Bank of America, French lender Natixis and Australia's Westpac have also hired in precious metals this year, according to sources and LinkedIn profiles.
The banks either declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment.