Comex Update: House Accounts See Largest Net Delivery Volume on Record

SchiffGold Gold Silver Comex Countdown

Strength in gold continues

Exploring Finance https://exploringfinance.github.io/
08-26-2022

This article first appeared on SchiffGold.

Gold: Recent Delivery Month

Gold has seen the largest delivery volume in 2022 with 33,593 contracts delivered so far and 244 remaining in open interest. Since 2020, only December and February last year recorded larger volumes.

Figure 1: Recent like-month delivery volume

Unlike past months, the large volume was not really driven by mid-month net new contracts. Activity was well below recent months with only 1,935 contracts opened for immediate delivery. It should be noted that this figure was negative up to 8 days past first notice so there was definitely still strength mid-month.

Figure 2: Cumulative Net New Contracts

From a dollar volume perspective, this month was more than $1.1B larger than last August but still well below the records from summer 2020.

Figure 3: Notional Deliveries

Another major event this month was the record net delivery of contracts from the banks. The previous record was set in April in the wake of the Ukraine/Russia conflict. This month is nearly 30% higher with 8,340 contracts in net delivery volume. BofA is still a big player as they buy back about half of the metal they delivered out last month.

Figure 4: House Account Activity

It’s very possible that banks are becoming more active as their inventory dwindles. As noted in the stock report, gold has been leaving Comex vaults at an unprecedented pace. While the last few days have seen inflows into Eligible, the removal from Registered is striking. Since May 1st, 4.17M ounces have left Registered. Nearly 13% of that occurred in the last two days alone as 540k ounces left (see below).

Figure 5: Recent Monthly Stock Change

Gold: Next Delivery Month

Jumping ahead to September shows elevated open interest. It is currently below both March and May of this year, but those months showed exceptionally high open interest at this point in the contract. Furthermore, both March and May were being influenced by the conflict in Ukraine. The elevated open interest this month does not (yet) have a clear driver.

Figure 6: Open Interest Countdown

The chart below shows deliveries for the last several minor months. Delivery volume has been quite elevated. The action in minor months can be heavily influenced by mid-month activity. Thus, regardless of the open interest at First Notice next week, it will be a few weeks before the full delivery volume will be known.

Figure 7: Historical Deliveries

Spreads

Jumping out to the October contract shows the market in strong Contango, higher even than the August contract at a similar point. The current spread between October and December is nearly $10.

Figure 8: Futures Spreads

The strong contango in the futures curve is one reason the spot market flipped from backwardation to contango at the beginning of the month (shown below). The analysis last month highlighted the market in strong backwardation for an extended period. Once August went into delivery, the futures contract went from August to October. The spot market flipped but the spread is already coming down quickly. The backwardation last month could be one reason for the heavy physical activity noted above. It will be interesting to see if the spread for October drops into negative territory over the next few weeks.

Figure 9: Spot vs Futures

Silver: Recent Delivery Month

Silver is still not seeing the same strength as gold. Delivery volume in August is the smallest for a minor month going back to January 2021. With only 74 contracts open, August will finish well below average.

Figure 10: Recent like-month delivery volume

Lower mid-month activity is one reason for this drop. As shown below, only about 330 contracts were opened for immediate delivery. This is about 25% of the volume seen in February contract of this year.

Figure 11: Cumulative Net New Contracts

The banks are also not nearly as active. BofA has restocked its delivery volume out last month (606 vs 600), but the other banks combined are only delivering out 235 contracts this month.

Figure 12: House Account Activity

This August will be the weakest dollar volume since August 2018 with only $105M delivered, less than half the amount from last August.

Figure 13: Notional Deliveries

One area where silver continues to impress is the drain on Registered. Outflows continue from Registered with 2.77M ounces out in the most recent day. Registered is down more than 65% since the all-time peak in December 2020. At current pace, Registered will be empty within a year!

Figure 14: Recent Monthly Stock Change

Silver: Next Delivery Month

September silver is starting to show signs of life! With 4 days to go, September has at least entered the pack. A lot will still happen in the next few days, but recent activity could be a good sign given where the contract stood a few weeks ago.

Figure 15: Open Interest Countdown

Last month finished quite weak so it would be good to see a turnaround.

Figure 16: Historical Deliveries

The market is still in strong contango, but has been dipping down as the contract approaches First Notice.

Figure 17: Roll Cost

While the futures market remains in contango, the spot market is in solid backwardation. The market is in the strongest backwardation since silver first saw its massive price spike back in summer 2020.

Figure 18: Spot vs Futures

Wrapping up

The gold price is clearly not reflecting all the activity going on under the surface. The demand for physical is really starting to materialize with no clear catalyst (e.g. Covid lockdowns or Ukraine/Russia war). The Comex data is important because it will likely be the first place to show stress in the gold/silver market.

The price is currently contained by unlimited paper supply that can always be created to meet paper demand. The COTs report shows that this isn’t even needed as Managed Money has gone cold on gold. Things start to change when physical supply cannot be found to meet physical demand. The data is pointing to this as a real possibility in both gold and silver. The outflow of metal combined with the increased delivery volume in gold points to something happening underneath the surface while the paper futures market still plays the same old game. Buckle up! Things could get very interesting in the months ahead!

Figure 19: Annual Deliveries


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

Data Updated: Nightly around 11PM Eastern

Last Updated: Aug 24, 2022

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