By Mr. Prithviraj Kothari, MD, RSBL
It was China v/s U.S or rather to be
precise it was the devaluations of the Yuan v/s the positive economic numbers
from U.S.
While one was trying to give the
much needed push to gold prices, the other, on the contrary was pulling gold
prices down.
Till the middle of the week, gold
prices moved upwards and the market was just about to its faith in it. But once
the US numbers were out, gold was once again losing its sheen.
Gold got the much needed lift when China
roiled global markets by devaluing its currency. Till then gold was travelling on
a mostly lower route since mid-June. By the end of the week, however, it
appeared the situation was stabilizing, with Chinese authorities on Thursday
saying there was no reason for the Yuan to fall further.
Gold prices lacked direction on
Friday as the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) increased the value of the Yuan
while boosting its gold holdings.
The Chinese government released gold
holding figures for the second time in recent weeks. The PBoC announced that it
bought 19 tonnes of gold last month when prices were at five year lows and
Total holdings were at 1,677 tonnes at the end of July, a one percent bump from
the previous month.
The gold price continued to slide
lower on Thursday afternoon after the dollar strengthened following upbeat US
data, and as concerns over China’s economy eased.
Spot gold was last at $1,116/1,116.4
per ounce, down $8.20 on the previous close. Trade has ranged from $1,113.7 to
$ 1126.8 so far.
The important numbers coming from
the US were as follows-
- PPI month-over-month in July was at 0.2 percent, above the 0.1 percent mark, while Core PPI in July rose 0.3 percent, besting the forecast of 0.1 percent.
- The capacity utilization rate in July was at 78 percent, matching predictions, with industrial production month-over-month in July jumped 0.6 percent, above the consensus of 0.3 percent.
- Preliminary University of Michigan Consumer sentiment in August was 92.9, just off the 93.5 forecast. Preliminary University of Michigan inflation expectations in August were at 2.8 percent, equaling the previous reading.
- The Dow Jones industrial average and S&P were each up 0.3 percent, while the dollar was 0.3 percent stronger at $1.1120 against the euro.
- Core retail sales month-over-month in July was in-line with forecasts at 0.4 percent, while retail sales month-on-month in July matched the consensus at 0.6 percent.
- US weekly unemployment claims were 274,000, near the prediction of 272,000 and the previous reading of 270,000.
The timing of the first rate rise by
the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is becoming increasingly important to
investors. The FOMC meeting is just over a month away and debate is ongoing
whether the Fed should maintain near zero interest rates or raise rates by 25
basis points.
The two main highlights for the
coming week are China and the FOMC. While everyone will be on a lookout for any
further price-supportive developments out of China or if instead the
Federal Open Market Committee says anything to rain on the yellow metal’s
parade.
If the Chinese markets remain more or less stabilized then focus will be shifted on expectations for the FOMC, which holds a policy meeting next month. The Federal funds futures have oscillated lately between factoring in a greater- or smaller-than-50% chance of a tightening in September.
The biggest factor will be Wednesday’s Fed meeting minutes as the minutes are from the July 28-29 meeting, after which there was no news conference.
The picture is expected to get clear on how the Fed is thinking about a potential September rate rise.
An aggressive sentiment coming out of these minutes will probable pull down gold prices but on the other hand dovish minutes could offer some support
Additionally, traders will keep close tabs on U.S. economic data-
- Monday- The New York Federal Reserve’s Empire State manufacturing
- Tuesday- Housing
- Wednesday- Consumer inflation
- Thursday- jobless claims, the Philadelphia Fed’s business survey and sales of existing homes
The focus continues to be on what the Fed is going to do at its September meeting. It’s going to be the fundamental factor across the board as far as commodity markets are concerned, particularly gold.
Apart from this meeting, traders and analysts will also keep a watch on any comments coming out of the European Central Bank, in case policy-makers should hint at increased bond buying known as quantitative easing. Further QE could provide further support to gold prices.
Given this picture, as of now majority of the market players expect gold prices to fare better in the week to come.
The
primary purpose of this article by Mr. Prithviraj Kothari is to educate
the masses of the current happenings in the Bullion world.
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"Gold To Be Pressured Downwards: RSBL"
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