Search This Blog

June 4, 2015

GERMAN #GOLD BUYING: A Chart You Have To See : SRSrocco Report

The Germans are buying more gold than anyone else in the west.

GERMAN GOLD BUYING: A Chart You Have To See

While EASTERN demand for physical gold investment remains strong, most of the folks in the WEST are bored with the barbarous relic as they continue to funnel their funds into highly inflated paper assets. However, the Germans seem to look at gold a bit differently… actually a lot differently.

Even though the Swiss continue to buy more gold on a per capita basis, German physical gold investment demand is the highest of all Western countries. How much higher? Let’s look at the chart below:

WEST Gold Bar & Coin Demand Q1 2015

According to the World Gold Council, total German physical gold bar and coin demand during Q1 2015 was 32.2 metric tons (mt), Switzerland ranked second with 13.8 mt and the U.S. came in third at 9.9 mt. Interestingly, German physical gold investment increased 20% compared to the same period last year while U.S. gold coin and bar demand fell 12%.

Matter-a-fact, German gold bar and coin purchases (32.2 mt) during the quarter account for more than half of total European demand (61 mt). On the other hand, the British, French and Canadians ranked the lowest in the chart taking the 5th, 6th and 7th spots respectively. What’s even more amusing, total physical gold investment from these three countries is about a tenth of German purchases.

Furthermore, Germans purchased more than three times the physical bar and coin investment than did Americans during the quarter. Now, as I mentioned above, the Swiss still buy the most gold per capita due to their long-term fundamental belief in gold ownership. However, if we compare German buying versus American… this is the result:

Germany population = 80 million (32.2 metric tons)
United States population = 320 million (9.9 metric tons)

Germany is actually buying 12 times more physical gold per capita than the United States.

Again, if we exclude the savvy gold buying Swiss, the Germans continue to be the strongest physical gold buyers in the West. Lastly, if we add up all the other Western countries total gold bar and coin demand including Switzerland, here is the result for Q1 2015:

Germany = 32.2 metric tons (45%)
Rest of West = 39.5 metric tons (55%)

Is there something the Germans know about gold that most of the folks in the West don’t?

NOTE:  It was brought to my attention by a new reader that I state gold in metric tons and troy ounces.  The reader thought this was a bit confusing for new folks learning about the industry.  I agreed.  Unfortunately, the industry publishes gold statistics in these two metrics.  I could convert everything to one value or the other, but anyone reading the published reports would see these two different metrics and still be confused.

Here is the conversion:  32,151 oz = 1 metric ton

Please check back for new articles and updates at the SRSrocco Report.




GERMAN GOLD BUYING: A Chart You Have To See : SRSrocco Report





No comments:

Post a Comment

Commented on MasterMetals

ShareThis

Tags

IFTTT Twitter MasterMetals News Gold MssterMetalsNews MasterMetalsNews mining stocks Commodities Mining GLD Silver Oil COPPER China Metals Dollar Energy Precious Metals MasterEnergy trading GDX Hedge Funds EV Battery Metals Finance exploration Glencore USA ETF GDXJ Platinum Africa Canada Nickel Technical Analysis Charts Chile Euro LME Lithium Latin America Australia BHP Base Metals Cobalt Futures Iron Ore Uranium central banks CME IPO Palladium RIO SIL SLV TSX middle east Asia DRC FED India PSLV Russia South Africa Trafigura Venezuela comex zinc Argentina Batteries Bonds Chavez Debt Ecuador PPLT Renewables currencies Anglo American Barrick Bitcoin Iran JPMorgan Chase Japan Mexico Peru Switzerland TSXV VALE coal Agriculture AngloGold BP Brazil EQX Education FCX Gas Kinross London Lundin Metals Streaming NEM NYMEX Nuclear Oreninc PGM Roxgold Royalties Sprott Turkey UK Vitol WGC infographic AEM Autonomous Vehicles Azimut Banks BlockChain CFTC CODELCO COT Cerrado Gold Colombia Cote d'Ivoire EDV Egypt Electricity FIL FSM Filo Financings GATA Goldman Sachs Guinea HFT IVN Indonesia Irak LSE LUG Loonie MENA Mongolia NGEx Newmont Oro PIIGS RUP Rare Earths REE Robert Friedland Rupert Resource S&P SQM Saudi Arabia Tsingshan UAE VC VW Yuan money quebec rare earths 1971 1979 AAUC ADM AGI ALB ARIS ATY AU AUY AZM Abu Dhabi Agarwal Alaska Antimony BIS BTG Bill Clinton Bin Laden CBX CCB CITGO CMOC Cameco Cargill Cars Chuquicamata Clice Capital Cobalt27 CoronaVirus Covid19 Crypto DJIA DOJ DPM Defense Demographics Djibouti E-Waste EGO EM ESG El Dorado Endowments Environment Europe FVI Fav Finland Food ForEx Frank Giustra Freeport McMoran GBP GDP GFMS GMIN Ghana Graphite Great Be Greece Green Energy Gundlach Gunvor HPX Haftium IAG IOC Inflation KGC KL Kazakhstan Kurdistan LBMA Louis Dreyfus Lunahuasi M&A MAKO MF Global Mercuria NDM Nigeria Northern Dynasty Oman Orion Osisko PDVSA PEA PEMEX PG Pebble Project Politics Private Equity Rabbit Recycling Repsol Research Rhenium Rhodium Rusal SKE SSRM SWF Sensors Shale Strategic Metals TGZ Tech Tesla Texas Ukraine VGCX VIX Victoria Gold WPM Warren Buffett XAU XGD XStrata YPF Yen Yukon Zambia diamonds spoofing stocks supply chain zinc News