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General Market Commentary
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General Precious Metals
Keeping up with gold price forecasts
As if there weren’t enough upheaval in the markets. Now Canada’s Bank of Nova Scotia (Scotiabank) — one of the world’s biggest lenders to the physical precious metals industry — has apparently told staff that it plans to close its metals business. Reuters, quoting two sources, reported last week that the bank will unwind its precious metals trading business in early 2021. Scotiabank has been involved in gold trading for many years and expanded the business when it acquired Mocatta Bullion from Standard Chartered in 1997. At its height, Scotiabank’s metals division had offices in North America, Europe and Asia. “Scotia was one of the top three traders and has traded precious metals for decades – a sad day for the name Mocatta, the predecessor company,” the mining team at Haywood Securities wrote in a research note. (Mocatta Bullion was created in 1684.)
Some say the closure — while not completely unexpected as Scotiabank had tried to find a buyer two years ago — will have an effect on price discovery and others warn that more banks may follow suit. As Reuters pointed out, Scotiabank “remains one of the five banks that settle gold trades and one of 12 market makers that provide liquidity in the London market. It is also a participant in daily auctions that set a globally used gold benchmark price.”
Jeffrey Christian, the managing partner and founder of CPM Group in New York, said the news wasn’t entirely surprising since Scotiabank had cut way back on its metals trading and storage business as early as 2018. But he also pointed out that the closure appears to be part of a larger trend. “There continues to be contraction in banking services, notably in metals and commodities trading, but actually across all banking services,” he told The Northern Miner. “Banks are closing and sloughing off business units, focusing on just a few areas of banking.”
Christian noted that the industry has witnessed a sharp decline in the number of banks involved in residential mortgages and retail real estate lending, for example, resulting in ever more concentration of business activities among fewer banks. “It is notable in commodities trading,” however, “since it is often said by bankers that metals trading ‘is not a traditional banking activity.’” But they’re wrong, Christian said. “Actually, it is the original traditional banking activity, if one goes back far enough,” and the consequence of the Scotiabank news, he said, “is that there is a further reduction in liquidity in the metals markets, which will be reflected in greater price volatility.”
Meanwhile, stimulus measures to combat the impact of COVID-19 are set to drive gold prices higher, bringing new forecasts for the metal almost every week. Marc Desormeaux, a senior economist at Scotiabank in Toronto, said in his latest commodity outlook published on April 30 that he sees a mean bullion price of US$1,650 per oz. this year and an annual average of US$1,700 per oz. in both 2021 and 2022.
Bank of America recently forecast real gold prices of US$1,695 per oz. in 2020, US$2,012 per oz. in 2021 and US$1,808 per oz. in 2022. It also predicted that gold will touch a peak of US$3,000 per oz. in 18 months, up from its earlier US$2,000 per oz. estimate, explaining that “as economic output contracts sharply, fiscal outlays surge, and central bank balance sheets double, fiat currencies could come under pressure and investors will aim for gold.”