Gold ETFs

Gold ETFs fell and outflows continued Wednesday after the Federal Reserve said it could either increase or scale back its bond purchases.

In April, bullion holdings in gold ETFs fell by 174 metric tons, a record, according to Bloomberg News.

Gold exchange traded product assets were 2,275.84 tons on Tuesday, the lowest since October 2011, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEArca: GLD) holdings, the biggest ETP, dropped to 1,078.54 tons, the lowest since September 2009.

“When you get an ETF market that doesn’t yield as high as comparable assets, then you will have continual topside pressure,” said Jonathan Barratt, the chief executive officer of Barratt’s Bulletin, a commodity newsletter, in the report. “People are moving funds from non-yielding to yielding assets.”

There has been strong demand for gold coins after the sell-off despite the ETF outflows.

“It’s been primarily the financial component that has been selling. I don’t think that we have seen a lot of small holders changing their view on gold,” said Nicholas Johnson, a portfolio manager who helps manage the $30 billion in commodities at PIMCO, in a separate report. [Gold ETFs Contribute to Bullion Price Slide]

Sales of U.S.mint’s American Eagle gold coins are at their highest selling rate since late 2009, despite the steady outflows seen in bullion ETFs, reports Frank Tang for Reuters. Analysts are expecting an Asian buying spike on the dips and central bank demand to remain steady.

Brendan Conway for Barron’s reports that the type of investor that buys gold in financial markets is different from the type who would purchase coins. Institutional investors and hedge funds are typically liquidating positions in ETFs, with the exception of a few retail investors. [Dull Gold Helps Inverse ETFs Shine]