Comex Stock Report: JP Morgan Refill the Coffers

SchiffGold Gold Silver Comex Stock

How deep is the real supply at the Comex?

Exploring Finance https://exploringfinance.github.io/
12-18-2021

This article first appeared on SchiffGold.

This analysis focuses on gold and silver within the Comex/CME futures exchange. See the article What is the Comex? for more detail. The charts and tables below specifically analyze the physical stock/inventory data at the Comex to show the physical movement of metal into and out of Comex vaults.

Registered = Warrant assigned and can be used for Comex delivery, Eligible = No warrant attached

Gold has seen only its second month of inventory increase since Feb of this year. Stocks increased by about 280k ounces in December and 517k since the last stock report. Could this be due to a surge in delivery requests? As reported last week, December delivery notices reached the highest point since March of this year in both gold and silver.

When contracts stand for delivery, a Short with Registered metal transfers the warrant to the Long. The metal does not physically leave the vault nor does it move metal from Eligible to Registered. That being said, the Short is out the metal and would need to restock in order to deliver a future contract. Additionally, the Long now has the option to remove the metal from the Comex vault.

Figure 1: Recent Monthly Stock Change

The chart below shows the daily activity since the last report. The activity picked up after the December contract stood for delivery. The net increase has been just shy of 300k, but this pales in comparison to the delivery activity. About 3.4M ounces of gold stood for delivery in December, 1.4M of which was JP Morgan clients.

Figure 2: Recent Monthly Stock Change

Silver has seen stocks increase by about 2M ounces in December so far. Again, this is a fraction of the 45M ounces that have stood for delivery so far in December.

Figure 3: Recent Monthly Stock Change

Looking at the detailed report shows a big one day move from Registered back to Eligible (the warrant was removed). Manfra was the vault who made this adjustment on Dec 6 of nearly 6M ounces of Silver. Unfortunately, there is not much more detail beyond the excel and PDF reports available on the Comex website. Any guesses to explain the activity would be pure conjecture. Perhaps someone stood for delivery and then moved their inventory back to Eligible to keep it out of the delivery cycle going forward.

Figure 4: Recent Monthly Stock Change

The table below summarizes the movement activity over several time periods.

Gold

Silver

In a normal year, and without the major restocking in 2020, the activity this year would be unprecedented (see historical charts below).

The next table shows the activity by bank/Holder. It details the numbers above to see the movement specific to vaults.

Gold

Silver

Historical Perspective

Zooming out and looking at the inventory for gold and silver since 2016 shows the impact that Covid had on the Comex vaults. Gold had almost nothing in the Registered category before JP Morgan and Brinks added their London inventory with nearly 20M ounces.

In fact, delivery in Dec 2019 was exactly 1.47M ounces. At the same time, on Dec 10, 2019 the total Registered stood at exactly 1.47M. This was up from 1.1M ounces on Nov 24, 2019. That means the entire pool of Registered turned over in a single month. In order to meet the demand, metal had to be moved from Eligible. Since then, the vaults have given themselves much more wiggle room as shown below in orange.

Figure 5: Historical Eligible and Registered

Silver also saw an increase in Registered around March 2020, but this has been draining much more steadily back to pre-Covid levels. Interestingly the ratio of Registered to Eligible is the lowest it has been since Covid started and even sits below 2019 levels at 26.3%.

Figure 6: Historical Eligible and Registered

Available supply for potential demand

Many critics point to the massive open interest compared to available inventory at the Comex. As can be seen in the chart below, the ratio of open interest to total stock has fallen from over 8 to 1.4. In terms of Registered (available for delivery against Open Interest), the ratio collapsed from nose bleed levels (think Nov 2019 where 100% stood for delivery) down to 2.6.

This ratio saw a recent uptick as open interest in gold increased dramatically in November when gold broke through $1800. Unfortunately, the price spike didn’t last and the ratio came back down. Gold is trying to regain some momentum after the Fed meeting this week though.

Figure 7: Open Interest/Stock Ratio

Coverage in silver is weaker than in gold with 7.4 open interest contracts to each available physical supply of Registered. This was as low as 6.5 in July, after reaching 9.1 in June. This ratio was up to 14 in 2019 before the Covid crash in silver open interest. Silver open interest has not recovered, but this is probably due to higher silver prices (traders may want the same dollar exposure).

Figure 8: Open Interest/Stock Ratio

What it Means for Gold and Silver

While the monthly delivery of contracts certainly represents physical demand. Tracking the activity in the Comex vaults shows the actual movement of metal. Open interest can increase much faster than physical metal can show up in Comex vaults. If a true “precious metal run” occurred, the Comex would be hard pressed to meet all physical demand.


Data Source: https://www.cmegroup.com/

Data Updated: Daily around 3PM Eastern

Last Updated: Dec 16, 2021

Gold and Silver interactive charts and graphs can always be found on the Exploring Finance dashboard: https://exploringfinance.shinyapps.io/goldsilver/