By Mr. Prithviraj Kothari, MD, RSBL
Recently gold has been
struggling to climb up due to the recurrent changes in the expectations of an
interest rate hike. There is quite a possibility that market players are paying
too much heed to the whole interest rate scenario and in turn missing on the bigger
picture.
Nonetheless, Gold continues to work lower
alongside the rest of precious metals – a resilient dollar and rising US real
rates have prompted traders to unwind their long positioning. Investors have become
increasingly edgy ahead of the conclusion of the Fed and the BoJ meetings
The spot
gold price inched lower during Asian trading hours on Friday amid Mid-Autumn
festival holidays in the region.
Spot gold
was last at $1,314.66-1,315.00 per ounce, down $1.17 from Thursday’s close.
The spot
gold price had tumbled to a week’s low of $1,307.75 on Thursday on selling
pressures following a brief spike to $1,328.10 sparked by weak US retail sales
data.
In data
released Thursday-
- US retail sales in August undershot at -0.3 percent
- Core retail sales in August undershot at -0.1 percent.
- Industrial production month-over-month in August also disappointed at -0.4 percent
- The US PPI in August was unchanged; a 0.1-percent gain from the previous month has been expected.
- The core PPI – excluding food and energy costs – was in line at 0.1 percent.
- The Empire State manufacturing stood at -2.0 missed the expected -0.9
- The Philly Fed manufacturing index at 12.8 beat the predicted 1.1.
- Capacity utilization rate in August stood at 75.5 percent, a touch below the 75.8 percent
- Weekly unemployment claims for September 1-8 in at 260,000 were just below the forecast 262,000 and, more importantly, the psychological 300,000 mark.
- Lastly, the current account balance in June was in line with consensus at -$120 billion. Business inventories month-over-month was unchanged in July, missing the 0.1 percent forecast.
There was disappointment
in the markets when the data was released that showed signs of a softening US
economy,.aThe US economy has recently shown signs of softening – data including
retail
sales, its PPI and industrial
production have undershot.
While
disappointing numbers have lowered the likelihood of an imminent Fed rate
increase - for September was just 12 percent, November was 19.3 percent and
December was 46.2 percent. Earlier this week, majority had expected a rate hike
in December.
With such
soft data coming in from the US, expectations have largely diminished towards
the Fed doing anything in September and the market is drifting back towards the
view they might do nothing for quite a while.
Some even
feel that markets are overeating to a potential rate hike and giving too much
attention to it, thus ignoring other crucial factors that have the potential to
influence gold prices.
The market
is once again divided between the supported of bulls and bears for gold. The
ones that are bullish are not worried about gold’s recent downtrend. What is the most important factor for investors is
that the gains seen so far are sustainable and that gold has more or less
stabilised before it takes that long jump to rally.
They believe Fresh disappointing US data has
reinforced our view that the Fed should remain on hold in September, resulting
in renewed weakness in the dollar and US real rates and prompting fresh buying
in gold.
Moreover, demand for gold from China and India is expected to rise over the months to come which will further boost gold prices higher. The market is moving towards to a festive season and this period of the year has generally seen demand for gold rising and this rise in demand will make up for the weakness gold has faced over 2016.
Moreover, demand for gold from China and India is expected to rise over the months to come which will further boost gold prices higher. The market is moving towards to a festive season and this period of the year has generally seen demand for gold rising and this rise in demand will make up for the weakness gold has faced over 2016.
Given that
gold is heavily influenced by fluctuations in the dollar and US real rates, we
are not surprised by the metal continuing to weaken. But the bullish supporters
for gold also believe that this weakness is temporary and is currently driven
by a stronger dollar and higher US real rates
Our
big-picture outlook remains bullish but more profit-taking could easily be
triggered if the price action disappoints, as it may be starting to do.
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 STABILISES: RSBL"
http://riddisiddhibullionsltd.blogspot.in/2016/09/gold-stabilises.html
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