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Showing posts with label us data. Show all posts
Showing posts with label us data. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 September 2017

Wait, Watch and Then Work

In 2016, gold was seen climbing 6% from $1050 to $1150 and another 10% gain during the first half of this year, in July and again in early August, gold prices dropped down to $1210, before rallying back up both times to $1290 and $1350 per ounce respectively. This back and forth price action has some investors worried if this is a real bull market in gold or yet another flash in the pan for the coveted yellow metal?

Reasons being more than one, Investors arereturning to gold again to prudently diversify their stock-heavy portfolios.  That’s very bullish for gold, as investment capital inflows can persist for months or even years.  This shift is most evident in the yellow metal.



There are a couple of issues pushing and pulling at the market. The reaction to the missile launch last week has been a bit negated by that better-than-expected (US) inflation number.

Spot gold slipped on Friday, shrugging off North Korea's latest missile launch over Japan, with strong US inflation data raising the spectre of another interest rate hike.

Let’s have a look as to how each factor was responsiblefor this wave like movement in gold prices.

North Korea - North Korea fired a missile on Friday that flew over Japan's northern island of Hokkaido far out into the Pacific Ocean, South Korean and Japanese officials said, further ratcheting up tensions after Pyongyang's recent test of a powerful nuclear bomb.

US Data - Geopolitical risks can boost demand for safe-haven assets such as gold and the Japanese yen. The yen slipped against the dollar on Friday, after earlier having risen on the news, with the greenback supported by strong US consumer inflation data.

Gold pared losses after data on Friday showed U.S. retail sales unexpectedly fell in August and industrial output dropped for the first time since January due to the impact of Hurricane Harvey.
Friday's numbers were in contrast to strong U.S. inflation data on Thursday which increased prospects of an interest rate hike in December.The Fed's next monetary policy meeting begins on Sept. 19 and now the marketis increasingly focusing on the Federal Reserve and its probability of another rate hike this year.

The Fed has a 2 per cent inflation target, and a series of subdued inflation readings have dampened expectations for further rate rises in the near term. Firming inflation could support the case for another rate hike. Interest rates tend to boost the dollar and push bond yields up, putting pressure on gold.

ECB - Gold fell on Friday after a European Central Bank official called for scaling back the bank's stimulus programme; although losses were capped when weaker than expected U.S. economic data raised questions about further rate hikes.

ECB board member Sabine Lautenschlaeger made the most explicit call so far from an ECB policymaker for paring the bank's 2.3 trillion euros money-printing programme.

Data showing that euro zone wages grew at their fastest rate in two years in the second quarter bolstered the case for reining in ECB stimulus.

This was rather a bad news for gold because this continues the trend of the market pricing in the normalization of monetary policy.

But he said there had already been plenty of headlines about the ECB planning an exit from its bond buying and the U.S. Federal Reserve reducing its balance sheet after its big quantitative easing programme.

Those "normalisation" actions by central banks tend to drive rates higher, push bond yields up and put pressure on gold, a non-yielding asset.

Summing it up, though the previous week saw gold moving like a see saw; the focus now shifts to the important FOMC meet due on 19th September. Wait, Watch and then Work would be the only trading tip for the time being.

Monday, 27 April 2015

RSBL: FRIENDLY NEWS....BUT GOLD FAILS TO IGNITE

                                                        By Mr. Prithviraj Kothari, MD, RSBL

  
The week has lot of gold friendly news: but unfortunately none of it supported gold. Be it the soft US data reports or the Greece Crisis or the weakening US dollar any many other news: Gold failed to benefit from any of them.

Any news failed to ignite gold prices leaving it range bound for the week untill the later part of Friday which did some new movement but downwards.


On Friday, the price of gold was down more than 1.5%, or nearly $20 an ounce, to as low as $1,176, the lowest price for the precious metal since late March. Gold ended lower on Friday as investors were more interested in next week’s monetary policy meet of the Federal Reserve. Investors believe that this meeting would give signals on Fed’s interest rate hike plans. The yellow metal was also impacted after some upbeat manufactured durable goods data from the U.S., even as the dollar continued to fluctuate.

US Data

          US weekly unemployment claims increased to 295,000 in April, higher than the forecast 288,000. US new home sales for March, meanwhile, came in at an annual rate of 481,000, which was 11.4 percent below the prior month’s reading and missed the 514,000 forecast. The recent soft data from the US could delay the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) from raising interest rates from near-zero levels until later this year. The Fed’s next meeting takes place on April 28.

            In some upbeat economic news, new orders for U.S. manufactured durable goods increased much more than expected in March, a report from the Commerce Department showed Friday.

Fed Interest Rate Hike:

             Soft economic US data has pushed the expected dates of interest rate hike even further. The run of weak US macroeconomic data has taken a June rise in interest rates by the Federal Reserve off the table and even a change in September now looks unlikely, according to the CME Group’s Fed Watch. Interest rates have been zero since December 2008 and now the members of the Fed’s policy board are locked in what has become an increasingly public debate on when will be the right time to raise interest rates with most of them believing that the hike will come sometime in September.


US Dollar: 

           Weak data on U.S. jobless claims, manufacturing and home sales have hurt the dollar this week, boosting uncertainty over whether the Federal Reserve will conduct its first U.S. rate rise in nearly a decade in June or September.

Equities: 

           Gold fell on Friday, on track for a third successive weekly loss as strength in global equities diverted interest, though uncertainty over the timing of a U.S. rate rise pegged prices in a narrow range. World stocks hit all-time highs on Friday as corporate updates in Europe and a post-dot com-boom peak for the U.S. NASDAQ stoked investor optimism.
          Gains for equities are spurring investors to shun gold, with prices posting the biggest tumble in seven weeks.

Greece: 

          Gold prices dipped below $1,180 on the London spot market and on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange on Friday afternoon after some progress was made in Greek debt talks. Gold’s credentials as a safe-haven investment appear to have taken a hit on suggestions that Greece is closer to a bailout deal after a summit of Eurozone ministers in Riga. The country is running out of money – Athens is under pressure to accelerate reforms that would secure a deal before it defaults on its debts.
           Greece ordered state entities from municipalities to a fund meant for future generations to park idle cash at the central bank in a scramble on Monday to pay the bills. With IMF loan repayments due next month, Greece has been tapping into public cash reserves in temporary transactions.

Meanwhile Eurozone ministers are attended a summit again  to discuss Greece’s possible default on its debt obligations but positive headlines have been supportive of the single currency, which possibly reduced gold’s safe-haven appeal.


In other news, Russia have increased their Gold reserves by adding nearly 30 tons in April. The brings the country's total reserve to 1238 tons. Russia have steadily invested in Gold through the last nine months of 2014, to diversify reserves and protect Ruble illiquidity.


Now the market players have turned their attention to Wednesdays Federal Open Market Committee statement. Investors was looking out for some signs of tightening of monetary policy as the FOMC decides exactly when to start normalizing. That would raise the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion, while boosting the dollar.


Despite the current stickiness within the range, I do feel that a bigger move is about to come. GDP and FOMC or even the Greece could be the next big catalyst not leaving the Geo-political tensions out of the way.


Whatever be the move, yellow metal will always be known for its safe haven appeal and as the countries are adding their reserves, it clearly indicates that Gold will never be out of picture.
 
TRADE RANGE:


METAL INTERNATIONAL DOMESTIC
GOLD $1173- $1200 an ounce Rs.26,500- Rs.27,500 per 10gm
SILVER $15.40- $16.30 an ounce Rs.35,000- Rs.37,000 per kg





“The primary purpose of this bullion blog by Prithviraj Kothari - MD, RSBL, is to educate the masses of the current happenings in the Bullion world.”

- Previous blog -
"RSBL:A Puzzled Market For Gold"
http://riddisiddhibullionsltd.blogspot.in/2015/04/rsbl-puzzled-market-for-gold.html

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