China's Slowdown Hurts Global Commodities
Indeed, investors seem relatively sanguine about US debt ceiling crisis, and are looking for other safe havens than choosing to pile into gold. "Despite gold's ammunition, prices have struggled to garner interest with ETP outflows continuing to dwindle," said Barclays Capital. "Net redemptions have reached 8.5 tons in October thus far, taking outflows for the year to date to 708 tons, with metal held in trust remaining at May 2010 lows." Physical demand for gold has also hurt prices. India, a key gold market, has seen government restrictions on gold hurt demand, but the World Gold Council estimates imports could rise by 15% year-on-year to 300 tons due to pent-up demand and traditional wedding season in the country. In China, gold market has also seen an improvement in sales, with gross imports up 2% month-on-month and 146% year-on-year at 131.3 tons, while net imports were down 5% month-on-month (but still up y/y) at 11.5 tons."The lackluster performance in gold returns in the midst of a US government shutdown and concerns towards the budget ceiling may reflect the relatively sanguine approach of financial markets currently," said Deutsche Bank's Lewis. "Indeed of the several measures of risk we track, there has so far been little escalation in risk aversion. Unless this changes we would expect gold prices to remain under pressure." Oil and natural gas prices have held up for the most part this year, but analysts expect the strength to dissipate during the remainder of the year as geopolitical risk fades and as a number of supply disruptions moderate. However, the latest International Energy Agency indicates a tight market in the fourth quarter as OPEC production falls to a two-year low. Production from Iraq and Libya has fallen 650,000 barrels per day last month, and even though the Saudis have cranked up production, the group's spare capacity has fallen to 2.9 million bpd - lowest since 2012. However, non-OPEC supply has also made up for the loss, with more than 1.2 million bpd of new supply flowing in this year. More significantly, the IEA boosted its 2014 non-OPEC supply outlook by 260,000 barrels per day to 56.4 million bpd, reflecting North American unconventional production that continues to exceed expectations, and representing growth of 1.8 million bpd (3.2%) over 2013. With global growth slowing and supply increasingly coming on to the market from non-OPEC sources, oil prices may struggle in the medium-term. Deutsche Bank says Brent crude is expected to fall from an average of USD 109 per barrel this year to USD 106.25 per barrel in 2014 and trending even lower to USD 105 in 2015. The slowdown in oil and gold prices may be part of a bigger trend. PIMCO notes that while the commodity "supercycle may be dead," the outlook for commodity returns today seems broadly consistent with historical returns, and commodities remain an important tool for hedging inflation risk. "Since 1970 - a period that includes the ending of the gold standard and severe inflationary shocks - commodities have added an average annual return of 3.59% on top of the return on collateral. Investing in a commodity index, which includes the return from collateral as well, may result in returns in excess of inflation. Even with the end of the supercycle, it doesn't seem that today the future of commodity returns looks that much different than the past."