By Mr. Prithviraj Kothari, MD, RSBL
Gold showed wave like movements this
week. Beginning with a positive tick on Monday, then lowering by the middle of
the week and again picking up pace on Friday, it seemed like a see saw trend
for gold.
Though gold was up on Monday, it continued
to remain under pressure from a Federal Reserve policy meeting that was due on
15-16 December weeks, when the US central bank was expected to raise interest
rates for the first time in nearly a decade. In its last policy meeting of the
year on December 15-16, the Fed was seen raising rates by a quarter of a
percentage point.
Gold has already slid 9 percent for
the year, its third straight annual decline, in anticipation of a rate hike.
Gold dipped on Thursday morning in the US, with the start of US monetary policy normalization spurring the dollar.
Gold dipped on Thursday morning in the US, with the start of US monetary policy normalization spurring the dollar.
The Federal Open Market Committee
(FOMC) decided to start to normalize US monetary policy after seven years of
near-zero interest rates, lifting the federal funds rate to 0.5 percent
from 0.25 percent. The policy board still sees the long-run rate at 3.5 percent
and finishing next year around 1.375 percent.
After markets halted to examine the
impact of the rise, the dollar gained against other major currencies and
pressured the precious metals lower – the greenback was last 0.7 percent
stronger at 1.0844 against the euro.
Post the FOMC meet, gold was
expected to come under increased downside pressure from a stronger dollar.
Investors will now focus on the pace
of future rate rises, which will be affected by the general strength of the
economy and underlying inflation data.
In US data, weekly unemployment
claims for were in line with forecasts at 271,000 and were below the
psychologically important 300,000 mark.
The Philly Fed manufacturing index
for December at -5.9 missed the predicted 2.1 while the current account for
September at -$124 billion was largely as expected.
While the Fed does not expect to reach
its inflation target of two percent until 2018, Chairwoman Janet Yellen said in
the following press conference that current transitory factors stem from low
oil prices.
After Thursdays decline, the markers
expected gold to drop further. But Gold prices jumped in morning trades
Friday after the dollar weakened against other currencies and as investors
bought back oversold position after prices slumped to over four-month low on Thursday.
Gold prices finally found some support in the weakening
dollar index following profit booking and buying at lower level. Prices of the
bullion were down as dollar index weakened against other currencies, boosting
investors' appetite for dollar-denominated commodities.
Gold was in positive territory on
Friday morning in London after the dollar eased slightly amid growing
expectations that the path to higher interest rates in the US will be a slow
one.
The spot gold price was last at
$1,054.9/1,055.2 per ounce, up $2.20 on Thursday’s close. Trade has ranged from
$1,051.2 to $1,058.1 so far. In the previous session, the yellow metal dipped
below $1,050.
Gold (and silver) rose on Friday, taking back about half of Thursday’s loss
of approximately 2.00%.
Reasons behind the price rise were-
- The anxiety in equities restricting from the despair in crude prices
- A changed deliberation of a longer-term view that gold is “due” to rise because of weakening dollar strength
- Hurry to grasp snips.
In the coming days and weeks, the
downside in precious metal prices may be limited due to low activity as a
result of Christmas and New Year, volatility is expected to remain calm. But
the year could start on a negative note for gold. Chairwoman Janet Yellen said
future rate increases will be gradual and the policy could be reversed if the
US economy begins to slow
In the interim, volumes are expected
to shrink while market participants head to the sidelines during the holiday
period, possibly resulting in choppy conditions.
The primary purpose of this blog by
Prithviraj Kothari - MD, RSBL, is to educate the masses of the current happenings
in the Bullion world.
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Previous blog -
"Tricky Week For Gold : RSBL"
http://riddisiddhibullionsltd.blogspot.in/2015/12/tricky-week-for-gold-rsbl.html
"Tricky Week For Gold : RSBL"
http://riddisiddhibullionsltd.blogspot.in/2015/12/tricky-week-for-gold-rsbl.html