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RSBL Gold Silver Bars/Coins

Friday 21 May 2021

Go For Gold

 As the week opened, Gold was seen climbing to 3 months highs at $1855 as real interest rates on US debt fell to 3-month lows amid a rush to re-impose Covid lockdowns in Asia, where the latest Chinese economic data came in weaker than the analysts' forecast. Spot gold rose as much as 0.2% to $1,870.73 an ounce, the highest since Feb 1 during Monday's trading sessions. 

The spread of the coronavirus was also dragged in some markets, with Singapore reporting the highest number of local infections in months and Taiwan also witnessing a spike in cases.

Gold and gold coins in Mumbai rose to the highest in more than three months as concerns over the pace of a global recovery crept back in following a flare-up in coronavirus cases in parts of Asia.

The second wave of this pandemic has hit India drastically. Families are being wiped out, restrictions have increased and the growth rate has fallen. In fact, it seems that not all the ones, who are affected, are being reported and the ground situation is even worse. 

Furthermore, gold dealers in India are getting a boost from a more downbeat U.S. economic data outlook, which might push gold to $1900 levels. The $1,900 level has been dodging gold since the beginning of January when the precious metal initially began its downtrend, which only ended last month after gold seemed to have found a bottom just above the $1,680 an ounce level. And right now is the time when markets digest several misses on the data front. Market consensus is also likely to downgrade its expectations.

We have always seen an inverse relationship between gold and economic data. Gold and RSBL coins tends to outperform when economic data is weakening and underperform when the economic prospects improve. Economic data expectations are often adaptive, falling sharply following a negative shock such as COVID shutdowns and the accompanying weak data. As the data starts to follow a downward trajectory again and the market enters the corrective part of the data cycle, yields are held down and the USD come under pressure. Low real yields should send gold higher again. All of this could help push gold even higher.

Going forward, investors and bullion dealers in India should keep a close eye on gold's relationship with the U.S. macroeconomic data that have been disappointing recently, especially when it came to the U.S. latest employment and retail numbers.

Investors remain concerned that a sign of rising inflation will force the U.S. Federal Reserve to hike interest rates earlier than expected. However, Fed President Robert Kaplan said on Monday that he doesn’t see inflation becoming a problem anytime soon and reiterated that he didn’t expect a hike in the interest rate until 2022. However, he also urged the Fed to start normalizing policy.

Gold has been in the negative for some time now; however, the recent price rise has put the gold pack into the green and helped it erase this year’s decline. We see several reasons that will bring about a rally in gold -

ETF - ETF investors are starting to swing into net buyers again, after the recent consolidation, and it makes sense for the metals to play catch up to the recent moves higher in other commodities. Investor sentiment has boosted with inflows into bullion-backed exchange-traded funds.

Consumer prices - Further expectations increase in consumer prices as they start to bolster demand for gold as a hedge.

Inflation - The precious metal is a traditional hedge against inflation, which is back with a vengeance. Inflation fears are finally translating into higher precious metals prices.

Pandemic - A lot of uncertainty with Covid-19 strains and mutations in the Asia-Pacific region will lead to safe-haven buying increasing gold prices.

Equities - The gold price usually climbs when stock markets crash. The S&P 500 index of top US stocks blasted through 4,000 for the first time at the start of April, but now looks overvalued as jobs growth disappoints and higher inflation threatens.

Investors, gold dealers and bullion dealers in India now await minutes of the Fed's latest meeting, due on Wednesday, for further clues to the movement of the central bank’s monetary policy. Investors will turn to the minutes from the Federal Reserve’s April meeting due Wednesday for potential clues to officials’ views on the recovery and how they define “transitory” when it comes to inflation. Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida said Monday that the weaker-than-expected U.S. jobs report for April showed the economy had not yet reached the threshold to warrant scaling back the central bank’s massive bond purchases. Meanwhile, Fed Bank of Dallas President Robert Kaplan said supply and demand imbalances and base effects will contribute to elevated inflation this year, but he expects price pressures to ease in 2022.

While the week is expected to be relatively quiet for economic data, investors will be anxious to see minutes on Wednesday from the Federal Reserve's policy meeting last month, which could shed more light on the policymakers' outlook on an economic rebound.

Wednesday 5 May 2021

Important Data Expected To Bring Volatility

After a record-breaking rally last year, gold has lost momentum amid optimism over economies reopening and vaccine rollouts, with the advancing dollar and rising bond yields denting demand for bullion.
 
Rising bond yields and upbeat risk appetite is denting the safe-haven metal. Gold fell more than 1% on Thursday as U.S. Treasury yields gained on upbeat U.S. economic data. Benchmark 10-year note yields rose to more than a two-week high during the session on U.S. President Joe Biden's proposal of trillions of dollars in new spending and data showing U.S. economic growth accelerated in the first quarter. Higher yields increase the opportunity cost for holding non-yielding bullion. 

The move higher in yields (and a corresponding strengthening of the US Dollar) brought pressure to the gold chart, and precious metals’ spot prices fell steadily throughout Tuesday’s session and into the Asian and European sessions. The pattern repeated in the morning hours of Thursday’s session, thanks to another boost to (possible) inflation expectations when the first pass at calculating growth in the US economy for Q1 of 2021 returned a very strong year-over-year increase (as expected) and the 4-week average of new jobless claims continued to fall towards 600K. After rebounding from Thursday morning’s steep losses, gold stabilized and looked strong on Friday, consolidating near $1770/oz. 
 
In the days to come, markets will be flooded with key economic numbers coming in from the US and a lot of volatility is expected owing to these numbers. All eyes will be on the slate of what looks to be very strong macroeconomic data, including manufacturing and employment reports.
  • the ISM manufacturing
  • Payroll numbers are quite important. 
  • factory orders
  • ADP nonfarm employment
  • ISM non-manufacturing PMI
  • jobless claims
Key U.S. data will be running hot, and gold will be closely following the market's inflation expectations as commodities continue to surge. Generally speaking, any surprise to the upside will get inflation expectations higher. That could drive real rates lower, which would be a good catalyst for gold and gold coins from RSBL.

On the other hand, we are seeing a rise in gold and RSBL coins appetite from the world’s 2 biggest consumers of gold- India and China. In India, prices are down more than 15% from a record high in August, according to the largest bullion dealers in India. Purchases in the world’s second-biggest consumer jumped 37% in the January to March period to 140 tons after slumping to the lowest in more than two decades last year, according to the World Gold Council. A combination of softening gold prices, a sharp pick-up in economic activity and the return of social activities such as weddings supported higher consumption, it said
 
China too saw a steep rise in demand for the yellow metal. The release of a spike in demand has become a feature of the gold market with first-quarter sales of jewellery to Chinese women at their highest since 2015. China’s gold jewellery consumption in the first quarter stood at 119.1 tons, the highest quarterly level in seven years, according to the World Gold Council’s latest survey released on Thursday.
 
The three main reasons behind this rising demand for jewellery were- 
  • The improving economic conditions
  • A slightly lower gold price and 
  • A sales spree related to holidays
While on one side we see the supply-demand equation, on the other side there is inflation and important US data. For now, the gold market is ignoring its perfect storm of low-interest rates, more government spending, and rising inflation expectations. However, next week could test the Federal Reserve's policy stance that it is too early to start tapering.

Before gold can move above $1,800 constantly, the market will need to be certain that the U.S. will see persistent inflation, not just momentary. Plus, other parts of the world should begin to recover according to the RiddiSiddhi Bullions.

Analysts are warning investors that if gold can't go up in this current environment, then look for lower prices. However, many analysts say that a retest of recent support could attract new buying momentum to the marketplace.