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Friday, 23 July 2021

Dont take off your eyes from gold

 Since the beginning of 2021, gold has witnessed a 5 % drop till date. It has been a rough path for gold as investors rotate out of the safe haven trade into riskier assets. The gold market continues to struggle as investors focus on the potential for tighter monetary policy and transitory higher inflation pressures.

Top gold dealers in India confirmed that the gold markets have been challenging to trade recently due to a stronger dollar. It was the strong USD that was clipping gold's wings. But before that, the USD index slipped fin 93.2 to 92.7 and 10y gained firm 1.15% to 1.29% amid US economic growth, uncertainty on Delta variant and inflation. Benchmark U.S. Treasury yields continued their bounce from five-month lows, further pressuring the bullion

Gold was subdued in volatile trade on Tuesday as the dollar strengthened, curbing inflows into the safe-haven metal despite some concerns over a surge in COVID-19 cases.

Gold prices hit a one-week low on Wednesday, though they’re up almost 2% in July. Gold price is pressurizing the lows, flirting with $1800 amid a renewed risk-on wave that has gripped the Asian market, as traders shrug off COVID worries for now.

Gold was down on Thursday morning in Asia, remaining close to a one-week low. Yellow metal once again lost its shine ass dollar strengthened, risk appetite increased as concern over surging COVID-19 cases subsided

Gold prices extended slide to their lowest in nearly two weeks on Thursday on the back of a rebound in stocks and firmer U.S. dollar, while investors looked to the European Central Bank for their stance on policy.

Spot gold fell 0.5% to $1,794.58 per ounce during Thursdays trading hours.

On the other hand, Dow regained the entire losses of Monday’s crash. Asian markets were seen rejoicing this recovery and India followed suit. Amid all the chaos and uncertainty, the focus will now shift to the upcoming FED meeting to be held this Wednesday... Powell’s new views on Wednesday will be of paramount importance, unlikely to do a tapering and boost for gold. As mentioned the heightened inflation and feared to be signs of stagflation, is a booster for gold since no one will focus on Dow then. So $1792-$1795 is still an immediate support from where there should be a recovery to $1810-$1815 possible while protective stop is at $1787-$1785.

But rising inflation could be setting gold up for a rebound.  We actually do see inflation tick up here; you can expect that gold will kick in.

A surge in coronavirus cases in the United States and other countries however spurred some safe-haven buying of bullion in recent sessions, with gold rebounding as much as 1.7% from Monday’s one-week low.

A lot of people in the gold market have taken their eyes off the ball this year, but if we get more bad news on the COVID front and equities weaken, you could get just that flight- to-safety buy in a market that can wake up pretty quick. RSBL analysts were of the opinion that world economies were moving towards recovery, trillions of dollars in U.S. fiscal spending, and the increasing demand for many metals as part of the global energy transition, should support commodities in the longer term, contributing to higher inflation expectations. In addition, ongoing monetary stimulus, alongside expected fiscal stimulus, adds conviction to the "here-for-longer" inflation case. While there are plenty of long-term fundamental factors that support gold prices, dollar and inflation continue to remain the most influential ones.

Saturday, 17 July 2021

Gold expected to reach new highs

In many of my previous blogs, I have mentioned as to how some macroeconomic factors will play a significant role in influencing gold prices. One of the main factors were inflation. And finally this key driver has brought in the much awaited rally in gold prices. 

Gold rallied more than 1% on the day as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said he hears America's inflation worries "loud and clear" while still viewing these price spikes as temporary.

RSBL analysts confirmed that gold notched a three week high on Wednesday following Powell’s comments. He said that inflation by all measures is running higher than expected. In fact, Chairman Powell, on Wednesday, acknowledged that inflation is above what the Federal Reserve is hoping to see. However, he tempered that statement by saying that this level of inflation will "moderate."

To be precise, speaking before the house financial services panel, Chairman Powell said, "Inflation has increased notably and will likely remain elevated in coming months before moderating."

The Fed has retained the stand that it will continue its current interest rate policy and monthly asset purchases until there was "substantial" progress towards its goal of full employment and stable long-run 2% inflation.

Prithviraj Kothari of RSBL stated that the monetary policy of the Federal Reserve prior to the pandemic and following recession was to keep inflation at a 2% target. However, the Fed has decided to let inflation run hot so that they can put their emphasis on maximum employment. The current inflation rate stands at 5.4%- the highest-level inflation has been at since the 2008 recession and largest increase since November 1991.

According to some market analysts, gold is seeing some renewed buying interest as Powell's comments appear to have a dovish tilt to them.

There was some havoc in the market as inflation gripped the US markets. Initial reaction from the Fed was a cool one. A denial mode continued, except he added that the policy changed will immediately come into effect if they feel that inflation is beyond control. So the imminent action will follow soon maybe taking few more weeks to taper. 

Meanwhile on Thursday, the Chinese GDP (2nd quarter) grew 7.9% and its industrial output grew 8.3%. 

While in the U.S PPI inflation stood at 1.0%- twice the expectation of 0.5%. USD index slipped to 92.4 and 10y yields more vigorously at 1.33%. 

What does all this mean to gold investors?-   the Federal Reserve is likely to continue their current mandate letting inflation continue to run hot until they see substantial progress towards full employment. With the inflation rate already at record highs similar to those seen in 2008, if, in fact, they do not raise rates in attempts to curtail rising inflation, we could see those numbers actually move higher. Not forgetting the fact that equities, which are an alternate to gold, do not qualify as inflation hedge.

Hence once again investors will move focus to gold which has time and again proven to be an inflation hedge tool.

And we all know what happens once demand rises. The yellow metal is expected to reach $2000 mark – a new target set by many investors in the markets.