Gold ETF Flows: September 2024

North America dominates inflows

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Highlights

  • Global gold ETFs extended their inflow streak to five months, with North America leading the charge.
  • Recent inflows finally flipped global gold ETFs’ y-t-d flows positive to US$389mn, leaving Europe as the only region with net outflows.
  • Global gold trading volumes edged higher amid rising OTC activities. 

September in review

Global physically backed gold ETFs1 saw their fifth consecutive monthly inflow in September, attracting US$1.4bn.2  Inflows were concentrated in North America during the month while Europe was the only region that experienced outflows, albeit only mildly. Thanks to continued inflows and a record-breaking gold price, global assets under management (AUM) rose by 5% to US$271bn, another month-end peak.3 And collective holdings climbed 18t to 3,200t by the end of September. 

Continuous inflows in recent months trimmed y-t-d outflows of global gold ETFs to flip positive to $389mn. Recent inflows, alongside a soaring gold price, has fuelled the y-t-d surge in the total AUM by 26%. It is worth noting that y-t-d flows of North American funds have flipped positive, leaving Europe the only region with outflows so far in 2024. Meanwhile, Asian funds continued to dominate global y-t-d inflows despite a recent slowdown in demand. 

Regional overview

North American funds witnessed inflows three months in a row, adding US$1.4bn in September. The US Fed surprised investors with a cut of 50bps at their September gathering, pushing Treasury yields and the dollar down during the month. Lower opportunity costs, related to interest rates and the dollar, boosted investor interest in gold ETFs. Similar to prior months, the surging gold price not only attracted investor attention, but also led to exercises of in-the-money call options of major gold ETFs, creating sizable inflows at the expiry date.4 Rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East during the month, we believe, also helped attract gold ETF inflows as investors seek safe-haven. 

Europe lost US$245mn in September, snapping its four-month inflow streak. Outflows were mainly from UK funds. Compared to the US Fed’s easing efforts, the Bank of England (BoE) was more reserved, leaving rates unchanged at 5% at their September meeting, citing the upside risk of inflation from elevated wage growth.5  The BoE’s cautious move cooled investor expectation of future rate cuts, and fuelled a sizable rebound in UK gilt yields which coincided with major local gold ETFs’ outflows. In contrast, both Germany and Switzerland witnessed inflows, minor as they are, likely driven by safe-haven demand amid the deteriorating economic outlook, especially in Germany.6  Meanwhile, intensifying expectations of a further cut from the European Central Bank (ECB) in October, despite a pause this month, led to notable falls in local yields, and likely contributed to increased gold demand.7

Once again, the region saw FX hedging related inflows, albeit at a slower pace than August, driven mainly by continued strength in local currencies against the dollar.

Asian funds attracted US$175mn in September, extending the region’s inflow streak to 20 months. India again saw strong inflows, driven by factors not too dissimilar from previous months. At the same time, the strong gold price momentum and elevated geopolitical risk were contributors. Chinese inflows were mild as the equity rally later in the month, fuelled by the government’s aggressive stimulus package, diverted some investor attention away from gold despite its strong performance. 

Funds elsewhere reported inflows, for the fourth successive month. September’s US$120mn inflows were mainly driven by Australian and South African funds. Although the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) held rates unchanged, local yields were generally lower in the month amid cooling inflation and weak growth.8  Alongside the record-breaking gold price in the local currency, Australian gold ETFs have now registered inflows for four consecutive months. Meanwhile, the 25bps rate cut from the South Africa central bank led to a sharp reduction in local yields and a weaker Rand, igniting the region’s fifth consecutive monthly gold ETF inflow.9 

 

Gold ETF flows

Data as of

Demand captures changes in global/regional gold holdings; fund flows capture the net amount of money (in USD) that comes in or out of gold ETFs globally/regionally. See methodology note.

Trading activity climbs

Global gold trading volumes rebounded in September, averaging US$259bn, 7% higher m/m. The main driver came from OTC activities, which saw a 10% m/m rise to US$176bn/day, translating to a 6% increase m/m in tonnage terms. Exchange-traded products saw a marginal increase of 0.2% m/m in volumes during the month –while activities at COMEX rose, this was offset by lower Shanghai volumes. Despite continued inflows, global gold ETF trading cooled in September, declining 5% m/m. 

COMEX total net longs continued to rise, reaching 976t by the end of September, a 6% m/m rise and the highest month-end level since February 2020. Increasing net longs were mainly contributed by money managers – their net positions reached 793t as of September, 8% higher than the end-August level and 84% above the H1 average of 430t. Similar to previous months, gold’s eye-catching performance and investors’ rising bets on the Fed’s future rate cuts were main drivers. 

Footnotes

  1. We define gold ETFs as regulated securities that hold gold in physical form. These include open-ended funds traded on regulated exchanges and other regulated products such as closed-end funds and mutual funds. A complete list is included in the gold ETF section of Goldhub.com.

  2. We track gold ETF assets in two ways: the quantity of gold they hold, generally measured in tonnes, and the equivalent value of those holdings in US dollars (AUM). We also monitor how these fund assets change through time by looking at two key metrics: demand and fund flows. For more details, see our ETF methodology note.

  3. Based on the LBMA Gold Price PM.

  4. Options expiry: While many ETFs have weekly or end-of-month option expirations, we refer to regular monthly expiration of ETF options that occur on the third Friday of each month, which generally have the most significant open interest. When gold prices rally into a major options expiration, it often elicits additional call options to be exercised, creating primary activity in the ETFs.