By Mr. Prithviraj Kothari, MD, RSBL
As I mentioned last week in my blog that gold is regaining its safe haven appeal, this week we saw this sentiment strengthening further.
Gold was
like literally all over the world this week as we saw the yellow metal gaining
its safe haven appeal in its true sense after a long wait. Sentiment in the
gold market remained sturdy after prices hit a one-year high in a figurative
move.
This was the third consecutive week
that gold witnessed positive gains, with increasing more than 5.3%- the biggest
weekly percentage gain since late October 2011.
Analysts
have noted that the yellow metal’s push back above $1,200 an ounce generated a
lot of focus and positive sentiment among appalling investors looking for a
safe-haven.
Many analysts are bullish on gold,
expecting sentiment to continue to grow as prices have broken through key
technical barriers, culminating in a weekly high at $1,263.90 an ounce.
Spot gold was last at
$1,240.50/1,241.20 per ounce, having rallied around 22 percent since the start
of the year.
The gold price rallied to a high on
Thursday of $1,263.30 per ounce, up five percent and it’s strongest since
February 6 last year when it peaked at $1,268.90.
Since this rally came in suddenly,
there were many investors that missed on to bank on the gains. The speed of the
rally and its strength suggest many would-be investors have been chasing prices,
having not been able to take advantage earlier in the rally – they had lost
faith in gold as a safe-haven given the four-year bear market.
This volatility was influenced by
more than one factor. It was a combined effort of the following-
Dollar- Sentiment towards gold has
changed dramatically, and gold has even moved up on some days in the face of a dollar
rally. With a change in sentiment, those underweight or waiting on the sidelines
started buying gold which furtherer fuelled gold prices.
The precious metal benefitted from a
softer dollar, which had failed to attract safe-haven demand despite the global
instability – the currency was last trading at a four-month low at $1.1349
against the euro.
A softer dollar is making gold more
affordable for holders of other currencies – it has fallen around four percent
this month, having already rallied strongly over the past 14 months – the
dollar index climbed to 100.50 in December from around 70 in January last year
and was last at 95.58.
Fed- As part of a two-day
congressional hearing, Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen attempted to
reassure markets that US growth was steady and the labor market was improving.
Yellen and her fellow colleagues are
being criticized for exacerbating the instability after raising rates in
December – rates were static around 0 percent since December 2008.
And the US Federal Reserve, having
raised rates in December for the first time in nine years, has not ruled out a
push into negative territory. The chances of further rises this year have
receded significantly, according to market consensus.
Because gold has no yield, it loses
some of its luster when interest rates are rising. But negative interest rates
negate this disadvantage while highlighting economic weakness against which
gold is historically seen as a hedge and preferred as one of the safest modes
of investments compared to its counterpart.
China- since the Chinese markets remained
closed for the Lunar Celebration, there was nil reaction from that side and
hence gold prices shot up one side.
With China absent from the market
for its New Year holidays this week, the market now waits to see the reaction
of Chinese investors upon their return on Monday, particularly as the US will
be absent on this day for Presidents day.
All eyes will be glued to the return
of the Chinese markets as investors are eager to see what they actually bring
to the surface post this week’s volatile developments.
Equity- The gold price benefited
from the meltdown in equity markets, as the yellow metal continued to hold
around one-year highs. Weak equity markets have spooked investors and they
promptly dumped risky assets and rushed to gold, which is seen as a
safe-haven.
Other Economies-
Uncertainty about global growth and
a mass sell-off in global equity markets unsettled investors, burnishing gold’s
safe-haven qualities, while Japan, Switzerland, Sweden and Denmark have adopted
negative interest rates.
European Central Bank (ECB) president
Mario Draghi is expected to follow suit at the bank’s March meeting, citing
inconsistent growth concerns and non-existent price increases.
Since the decision, Japan lowered deposit
rates into negative territory and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi
is expected to implement the same policy as soon as March.
Both economic regions are struggling
with poor economic growth and non-existent inflation despite billions in easy
money and years of near-zero interest rates.
Negative interest rates are
generally good for gold as the improbability and agony linked with negative
rates tends to surge interest in gold, but the more distinct shift of monetary
policy in this direction by central banks is encouraging even greater flows
into bullion.
While analysts are positive on the
gold market, they are not ruling out some weakness at the start of the week.
The
primary purpose of this article by Mr. Prithviraj Kothari is to educate
the masses of the current happenings in the Bullion world.
- Previous blog -
" Gold Regaining Its Safe Haven Appeal: RSBL"
http://riddisiddhibullionsltd.blogspot.in/2016/02/gold-regaining-its-safe-haven-appeal.html
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