ETFs Globally Report Boost in Gold Holdings for Fifth Straight Month


<p>After charting the highest level of gold inflows on record in September, the flow of gold into ETFs slowed modestly in October but remained comfortably above the year-to-date average.</p>
<p>It was the fifth straight month of net gold inflows into ETFs globally.</p>
<p>In total, 54.9 tonnes of gold flowed into gold-backed funds last month. As of the end of October, gold ETFs held 3,893 tonnes of metal, about 1 percent below the all-time high reached during the pandemic.</p>
<p>Assets under management (AUM) by gold ETFs rose 6 percent to a record $503 billion. &nbsp;</p>
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<p>North American funds led the way, adding another 47.2 tonnes of gold to their holdings, busting AUM by $6.5 billion. This occurred despite some profit-taking at the end of the month that drove $1 billion in outflows. Before the gold selloff, North American funds were on track for another record month.</p>
<p>According to the World Gold Council, &ldquo;<em>Geopolitical risk, lower yields, and equity market frothiness may have been key drivers of gold demand as investors seek portfolio diversification</em>.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Asian funds also reported significant inflows of 44.8 tonnes of gold. Chinese ETFs dominated in the East, adding $4.5 billion to their holdings. According to the World Gold Council, &ldquo;<em>The US-China tension flare-up in early October, alongside the gold price strength, sparked renewed gold interest among local investors. And slowing growth in Q3 also boosted local investor safe-haven demand.</em>&rdquo;</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Japanese ETFs have reported inflows of metal for 13 straight months, while Indian funds charted their fifth month of positive flows.</p>
<p>On the flip side of the coin, European funds reported significant outflows of -37.4 tonnes totaling $4.5 billion. It was the region's second-largest outflow on record.</p>
<p>Switzerland was the bright spot, reporting gold inflows, but it wasn&rsquo;t enough to offset a record decrease in UK-based fund gold holdings. German ETFs also reported significant outflows.</p>
<p>According to World Gold Council analysts, the outflows in Europe were driven by a combination of profit-taking and portfolio rebalancing.</p>
<p>Funds in other regions, including Australia and Africa, reported modest gold inflows of 0.3 tonnes.</p>
<p>ETFs are a convenient way for investors to play the gold market, but&nbsp;<a href="https://www.moneymetals.com/news/2024/03/08/paper-gold-vs-real-gold-its-important-to-know-the-difference-003038&quot;>owning ETF shares is not the same as holding physical gold</a>.</p>
<p>ETFs are relatively liquid. You can buy or sell an ETF with a couple of mouse clicks. You don&rsquo;t have to worry about transporting or storing metal. In a nutshell, it allows investors to play the gold market without buying full ounces of metal at the spot price.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Since you are just buying a number in a computer, you can easily trade your ETF shares for another stock or cash whenever you want, even multiple times on the same day. Many speculative investors take advantage of this liquidity.</p>
<p>But while a gold ETF is a convenient way to play the price of gold on the market, you don&rsquo;t actually possess any gold. You have paper. And you don&rsquo;t know for sure that the fund has all the gold either, especially when the fund sees inflows. In such a scenario, there have been difficulties or delays in obtaining physical metal.</p>
<h2>Gold Trading Volumes</h2>
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<p>Gold trading volumes surged in October, hitting a record high of $561 billion per day. That was a 45 percent month-on-month increase.</p>
<p>Trading volume in tonnage terms rose 31 percent month-on-month to 4,287 tonnes per day. That was just 1 percent below the record set in April at the height of tariff tensions.</p>
<p>Exchange-traded volume rose 59 percent month-on-month, averaging $300 billion per day. There was strong activity on both the COMEX and the Shanghai Futures Exchange.</p>
<p>Over-the-counter trading was up 28 percent on the month to $245 billion per day. That was 92 percent higher than the 2024 average.</p>
<p>The government shutdown prevented updates to net long positioning. However, futures open interest fell 4 percent month-on-month to $235 billion by month-end. This signals a decline in long positions.</p>

      



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