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That 2500/t year was in reply to the previous discussion of paper gold traded vs physical gold. Its higher up on the thread.But what is the volume of existing gold? At 2500 new tones every year, as it doesn't get used for anything and is completely recyclable, even that doesn't stack up. It trades about 3 tonne a day. Maybe 6 on a high vol day and real extreme vol 15 tonne.May be they were referring to volume of paper gold traded rather than open interest. It wouldn't surprise me if that ratio is 100:1.
So can you demonstrate how that equates to massive leverage in the gold market?Yes, I know what open interest is.
You are right about one thing. I don't understand what you are 'trying' to say.
I don't even understand what you have already said.
Perhaps you could try harder by
1) actually providing the kind of data which you demand from others
and/or
2) actually saying what you want to say instead of trying to say it.
But what is the volume of existing gold? At 2500 new tones every year, as it doesn't get used for anything and is completely recyclable, even that doesn't stack up. It trades about 3 tonne a day. Maybe 6 on a high vol day and real extreme vol 15 tonne.
Considering BHP trades about 2 to 4 % of market cap a day we are talking similar numbers (if not way way less for gold). Where are all the BHP bugs crying conspiracy? I mean you can even buy BHP paper derivatives!!
Bintag ^
That 2500/t year was in reply to the previous discussion of paper gold traded vs physical gold. Its higher up on the thread.
As for the data on bhp? April 15th 2011 it did 50m shares. Which is rather modest considering avg vol is 20m shares. Divided by shares outstanding at the time = 2%
Gold trade = 0.24% of mkt cap as previously shown.
I think anyone with even a small amount of objective reasoning capability would acknowledge that 400 tonnes/day is an abnormal event if 'normal' trading volumes are 3 to 6 tonnes per day. In fact it is abnormal by a factor of 66 to 133 times.
So I will try to rephrase my own question by considering just the relative changes in trading volume.
GOLD
TH indicates that normal trading volume for gold is 3 to 6 tonnes per day and that 15 tonne per day is 'extreme'.
HA! So checking my own calculations I'm off by a factor of 100!!
300 to 600 tonne or a bit higher is the avg volume as per Skyquakes post.
sorry.
So after all this we have been arguing based on incorrect data.
HA! So checking my own calculations I'm off by a factor of 100!!
300 to 600 tonne or a bit higher is the avg volume as per Skyquakes post.
sorry.
I was always talking about the leverage in the market not being 100:1. It is nowhere near it.
I presume this 300 to 600 tonnes per day is paper transactions. How does this compare to average physical gold deliveries?
So what is the actual leverage and what data can we use to calculate it?
Bintang, can you please clarify for us whether you really believe the "market cap of gold" is annual production multiplied by spot price, rather than total above ground gold multiplied by spot price?
I said the following:
" I don't think it helps to use either the total above ground quantity of gold in existence or the annual gold production as proxies for 'gold market cap'."
Is that not clear?
how about you show us the data for exactly when the trade in BHP shares reached a level during the GFC that would equate to 16% (= 400/2500) of its market cap in a single day (let alone a few hours).
Not really, because you also said this
Implying the market cap of gold is annual gold production * spot price...where you get that it supposedly equates to 16% of "gold market cap" in a single day (let alone a few hours).
But what is the volume of existing gold? At 2500 new tones every year, as it doesn't get used for anything and is completely recyclable, even that doesn't stack up. It trades about 3 tonne a day. Maybe 6 on a high vol day and real extreme vol 15 tonne.
Considering BHP trades about 2 to 4 % of market cap a day we are talking similar numbers (if not way way less for gold). Where are all the BHP bugs crying conspiracy? I mean you can even buy BHP paper derivatives!!
I used the figure of 2500 simply because I was trying to make sense of the Gold vs BHP comparison started by TH in the following post:
..... Everyone here has shown you by various measures that the amount of gold, taking your claim of 400 tonnes at face value without verification, is not abnormal by any stretch, even compared to much smaller markets like the market cap of a single equity.
Price smash = opportunity to buy physical gold at bargain basement prices.
If it was natural price action - please can we have some more.
If it was manipulation - please can we have some more.
Just ask all those gold hoarding chinese and other Asian ideological gold bugs who obviously have so much fiat money they don't know what to do with that they have decided to just throw it away by buying useless yellow metal.
Silly people.
Well those that bought "at bargain basement prices" when it was getting smashed were sure throwing it away!
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