Gold Surges Despite Economic Strength and Hawkish Fed

Gold Surges Despite Economic Strength and Hawkish Fed

As of 5:30 PM EDT, gold futures for the most active April 2024 contract were fixed at $2,394.40, up $17.80 or 0.75%.

Spot gold also rallied, currently trading at $2,378.76 after gaining $17.69 or 0.75% on the day.

The precious metal managed to overcome headwinds from a stronger U.S. dollar, which gained 0.21% to push the dollar index to 105.99.

The recent upswing in gold prices, including today's moderately higher settlement, can be partially attributed to the safe-haven appeal of the yellow metal. Persistent geopolitical tensions in the Middle East are at the forefront of investors' minds, adding to bullish market sentiment. Despite robust U.S. economic data that reduces prospects of near-term interest rate cuts, gold is finding support.

The escalating conflict between Iran and Israel is a key driver of haven demand. Israel has warned it will retaliate against a barrage of attacks by Iran, rebuffing calls for restraint from the U.S. and other Western nations. On Saturday, Iran unsuccessfully launched over 300 drones and missiles into Israel in a massive strike, in retaliation for an alleged Israeli attack on an Iranian embassy in Syria. Without assistance from a coalition including the U.S, Britain, France and Jordan, the damage could have been devastating.

Another major bullish factor is continued central bank buying as central banks globally add to their gold reserves, viewing the metal as a prudent safe-haven asset.

Gold's gains are occurring despite data showing weekly U.S. jobless claims remained at low levels last week, indicating a tight labor market. Strong economic figures and hawkish Fed rhetoric have prompted investors to dramatically rethink chances of near-term rate cuts.

According to the CME's FedWatch tool, there is a zero chance of a rate cut in May, and a 1.7% chance of a rate hike. Furthermore, the is only a 18.9%% implied probability of a rate cut, and a 1.4% chance that the Fed will hike rates at the June FOMC meeting.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said at an event in Washington that "recent data have clearly not given us greater confidence" on inflation, suggesting rates may need to remain elevated for longer. He noted that higher inflation "may necessitate maintaining current interest rate levels for an extended period."

While the economic backdrop seems unfavorable, gold continues drawing safe-haven bids amid heightened geopolitical risks and central bank buying. For now, those factors are overshadowing tighter Fed policy expectations.

Gary S. Wagner

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David – http://markethive.com/david-ogden

The gold price is up nearly 19 in this rally but you haven’t seen anything yet – abrdn’s Robert Minter

The gold price is up nearly 19% in this rally, but you haven’t seen anything yet – abrdn’s Robert Minter

Although Western investors continue to ignore gold even as prices continue to hit record highs, they are no longer actively getting in the way of higher prices, which means the current rally has legs to run higher, according to one market analyst.

In an interview with Kitco News, Robert Minter, Director Of Investment Strategy at abrdn, said that gold’s rally to record highs above $2,350 an ounce is just getting started, and it's only a matter of time before retail investors jump into gold-backed exchange-traded funds to kick off the next major leg higher.

Minter’s comments come as abrdn celebrates a significant milestone with its gold-backed ETF. Last week, assets under management in abrdn Physical Gold Shares ETF (NYSE: SGOL) surpassed $3 billion for the first time.

Although investment demand remains somewhat lukewarm, Minter said gold investors should be content that at least the selling has stopped.

Minter explained that since April 2022, ETF investors have sold around 750 tonnes of gold, creating a massive supply in the marketplace that was met with two years of historic demand from central banks.

Minter pointed out that central bank demand hasn’t gone away; however, the supply of gold has dried up as ETF selling has slowed to a trickle. Although central bank gold buying has slowed in recent weeks, Minter said the overall trend in official purchases remains higher.

“If you were a prudent central bank fund manager in some of these countries, you would diversify away from the dollar to reduce your risk, plain and simple,” he said.

However, the broader question remains: when will Western investors embrace gold again? Minter said that he expects Western investors are waiting for an actual rate cut from the Federal Reserve.

Despite new insight from a bevy of central bankers last week, the Federal Reserve has remained somewhat coy on the start of the next easing cycle. Some monetary policy committee members have said they would be reluctant to cut interest rates as inflation remains elevated.

While the timing of the Federal Reserve’s easing cycle remains a moving target, Minter said that there is no question that interest rates will have to come down.

With credit card debt at record highs, insurance premiums rising across the board, and government debt growing out of control, the U.S. economy can’t afford to keep interest rates in restrictive territory much longer, Minter said.

“The Fed has made enough mistakes in the last three years that I think they're very cautious not to make another,” he said. “If you were the Chair, you would have to know the impact of the magnitude of the rate rises you've done in a short time will have on the economy. This kind of monetary policy usually breaks something in the economy on a structural level, and you have to play catch up really quickly. You certainly wouldn't risk much higher unemployment just to bring housing inflation down a few tenths of a percent.”

Even if the Fed holds rates unchanged through the summer, Minter said that he still expects to see rate cuts and the start of a new easing cycle before the end of the year.

Since holding support at $2,000 in early February, gold prices have rallied nearly 19%, with prices hitting a new intraday-day at $2372.50 an ounce early Monday. However, Minter said there is still significant value in the gold market even after this rally.

“Regardless of timing or magnitude, the next Fed funds move is a cut, and historically, that led to 57%, 235%, and 69% gold price increases in 2000, 2006, and 2018,” he said. “Even with prices up 18%, we haven’t seen anything yet.”

Kitco Media

Neils Christensen

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David – http://markethive.com/david-ogden

Wall Street advises caution on gold prices next week Main Street mashes the gas

Wall Street advises caution on gold prices next week, Main Street mashes the gas

After last week’s price action was led by inflation data, gold markets were once again dominated by the Federal Reserve and interest rate expectations, though traders’ feelings seemed to evolve as the days went by.

In the immediate aftermath of Wednesday’s FOMC meeting, markets took the Fed’s maintenance of three projected rate cuts in 2024 and ran with it, weakening the greenback and driving the yellow metal to yet another all-time high in both futures and spot prices on Thursday.

Then, later trading brought a major bounce to the U.S. dollar and a significant retracement for gold, which continued through the Friday trading session.

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The latest Kitco News Weekly Gold Survey showed market experts divided and cautious on gold’s direction heading into the final week of the first quarter, while retail traders are very much back on the bullish bandwagon.

Colin Cieszynski, Chief Market Strategist at SIA Wealth Management, captured the zeitgeist among market participants at the conclusion of Fed week. “I am neutral on gold for the coming week,” Cieszynski said. “It has had a big move lately, and may consolidate in the coming days with the US Dollar strengthening, and it being month-end, plus a short trading week next week.”

Darin Newsom, Senior Market Analyst at Barchart.com, said he’s keeping his downward bias for next week. “I’ll stick with this for a third consecutive week,” he said. “It was looking a bit questionable Thursday, until the April contract dropped more than $40 off its session high through the close. With daily stochastics continuing to indicate more downside potential in the market, and the US dollar index gaining strength, April gold could work lower over the next week.”

“The key will be its previous 4-day low, theoretically sitting at $2,150.20 next Monday, depending on what happens Friday,” Newsom added.

“Despite surging to a fresh all-time high on Thursday, gold bulls seem tired and weighed down by a stronger dollar as the week comes to an end,” said Lukman Otunuga, senior market analyst at FXTM.

Everett Millman, Chief Market Analyst at Gainesville Coins, said he thinks that despite Powell’s vote of confidence on the overall economy, and the employment situation in particular, it was the rate cut forecast that drove the optimism coming out of the FOMC on Wednesday.

“I think it does go back to the dot plots, the fact that they haven't shifted to a less dovish stance, at least not in their forecast,” he said. “There is definitely some reason to be skeptical of the dot plots themselves, they haven't always played out according to what the Fed is forecasting. But I think that's really the main reason why gold moved higher, why it seemed to like the news, even though it really wasn't all that dovish.”

“We're not going to say it was the same type of stance the Fed had coming into this year, where they tried to be talking tough about inflation,” he added. “We didn't really see any of that.”

Looking beyond the FOMC, Millman said that there may just be a momentum trade going on with gold right now. “The fact that we have continued to maintain close to all-time highs, that's going to push a lot of trend-following traders and tactical investors into going long gold or covering their shorts,” he said. “I think that’s probably having a larger effect on the gold price action we're seeing, more so than people's expectations of the Fed, although obviously that's always going to be percolating in the background.”

Millman said that the technical picture is not confirming a continuation of this major pullback. “From what I've seen, most of the technical patterns in the gold chart are fairly bullish,” he said. “Having said that, I’m a big believer in mean reversion, and the fact that gold was almost certainly a little bit overbought when it got close to that $2,200 level, I think this is a routine correction that we should expect to see after gold had a month where it posted triple digit gains. So it doesn't surprise me, and I think we're going to have to see how it plays out in these coming weeks.”

Millman agreed that now is a perfect time to sit still and wait for things to settle a bit. “My vote is certainly neutral or sideways,” he said. “I think it would be extremely encouraging if gold could just hold on to most of its gains, given that we've already moved so much higher. When I do look out a little further, towards the third quarter, fourth quarter, by year-end, I do expect gold prices to be higher than they are now. I do expect them to be at new all-time highs. But in the short term, I think that the market just needs a breather.”

This week, 15 Wall Street analysts participated in the Kitco News Gold Survey, and their views were spread fairly evenly across the spectrum. Six experts, or 40%, expected to see higher gold prices next week, while four analysts, or 27%, predicted price declines. Five experts, representing 33%, predicted sideways trading for the precious metal, or suggested they would sit on the sidelines next week.

Meanwhile, 170 votes were cast in Kitco’s online polls, with the vast majority of Main Street investors anticipating further gains for gold next week. 117 retail traders, representing 69%, looked for gold to rise next week. Another 25, or 15%, predicted it would be lower, while 28 respondents, or 16%, were neutral on gold’s near-term prospects.

Next week will see the release of new home sales on Monday, durable goods, consumer confidence, and the Richmond Fed survey on Tuesday, and MBA mortgage applications on Wednesday. Thursday, however, will be the busiest day next week due to the long Easter weekend, with final Q4 GDP, jobless claims, pending home sales and the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey.

Sean Lusk, co-director of commercial hedging at Walsh Trading, was surprised at the positive sentiment from both Powell and the markets, and he doesn’t believe the Fed will be able to deliver 75 basis points of cuts this year.

“I really can't believe what I'm hearing, to be quite honest with you,” Lusk said. “I suppose I shouldn't be that surprised. Are they saying the economy's not as strong as it's perceived to be, given where the indexes are? Or are they saying that there's no inflation, or not as much inflation as it appears to be for the rank-and-file at the grocery store, because it does exist there.”

Lusk said that as far as the greenback is concerned, it's been a ‘buy-the-rumor, sell-the-fact’ event, which he found interesting. “The dollar shot up for two days in a row here, and that's kind of an odd reaction when you get, I would say, neutral to dovish commentary,” he said. “But you also have to recognize, at least in gold's case, volume was ticking up to 300,000, 400,000 contracts in the April contract. Now it's down about 150,000 a day, but you’ve got option expiration on the April contract Monday, and then you're going to roll to June.”

“I think this is all this is, today's weakness, maybe yesterday, they got up to some obscene high and they're yanking back and that's the normal ebb and flow in the markets,” he said. “Plus, you're coming into month and quarter-end, and we've had a hell of a performance here for the better part of two months, since the February lows.”

“They're going to back off here and take some profits, but I don't see any technical damage being done to the charts,” he added. “This thing could fall back to $2,125 and we're still in a bullish posture. We hit our 5 percent marker, that's where we're kicking around, maybe we're just a little bit below it today. I still think once June goes most actively traded, which it will next week, it has a chance to get to and surpass its contract high at $2,246 and then spike up to about $2,270, $2,280, in that area. That'll be 10 percent higher on the year, so that's the target. But if we start slipping underneath some [Fibonacci] numbers here at $2,125, then it can go down to halfway back from the February lows."

“Could they wipe this out at any moment?” he asked rhetorically. “Yeah, but what's changing? Why would they? You're just not going to go up every darn day at these levels, but you are consolidating in some higher ranges, and that's really the more important thing here. You’ve got June gold consolidating between $2,190 and $2,210 for the most part, and that's what I'm keying on here. The market still is in a pretty deep contango here, pretty steady, and should that remain, it just tells you the price is going higher.”

“Listen, my gut feeling here is that seasonally, we'll have some dips and valleys into the end of the quarter, and a three-day weekend next weekend, but the wild card is going to be what the wild cards have been: the Middle East, Eastern Europe, there's always black swans circling with the banking crisis,” he said. “In April, we'll get a second round of earnings, we'll see what those are. Then you're probably going to have a pullback in May when realization starts to hit that they’re not going to cut three times, maybe once at best.”

“Gold rallied through $2220 on the back of the initial dovish read of the FOMC as the dollar and US rates fell,” said Marc Chandler, Managing Director at Bannockburn Global Forex. “However, the market took another look, and rallied the dollar and steadied US rates. Gold pulled back to almost $2162.”

“I look for a firm dollar in the coming days and this may weigh on the yellow metal,” Chandler added. “Support is in the $2145-50 area. While many focus on the central bank gold buying, Chinese and Turkish retail investors also reportedly have been keen buyers. The momentum indicators are stretched but could be relieved by extended sideways activity.”

Mark Leibovit, publisher of the VR Metals/Resource Letter, is also expecting USD strength to push gold lower. “As Dollar rallies, look for a pullback.,” he

James Stanley, senior market strategist at Forex.com, said he believes gold is due for a pullback next week.

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“The trend is starting to feel frothy and even with the Fed going dovish and sticking with three cuts in the forecast, bulls weren’t able to do much beyond $2,200 yet,” he said. “There was an open door for a pullback as gold was holding a descending triangle very near the highs, but the Fed was surprisingly dovish (imo) at the FOMC rate decision and that brought a jolt to the USD which has largely been priced-out since.”

And Kitco Senior Analyst Jim Wyckoff sees gold prices rangebound next week. “Sideways, as bulls have run out of gas on a near-term basis,” he said.

Spot gold last traded at $2,165.31 per ounce at the time of writing, down 0.74% on the day but up 0.43% on the week.

Kitco Media

Ernest Hoffman

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David – http://markethive.com/david-ogden

Gold silver modestly up on short covering by futures traders

Gold, silver modestly up on short covering by futures traders

Gold and silver prices are a bit firmer in quieter midday U.S. trading Tuesday. Tepid short covering and some perceived light bargain hunting are featured in the two precious metals, after both recently hit five-month lows. December gold was last up $4.00 at $1,926.90 and September silver was up $0.15 at $23.485.

The marketplace is quieter amid the summertime doldrums and as traders and investors are looking ahead to the late-week annual Federal Reserve symposium held in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. This meeting usually produces some market-sensitive news from world central bankers’ comments, including Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Powell is scheduled to speak at the confab on Friday.

The key outside markets today see the U.S. dollar index higher, while Nymex crude oil futures prices are slightly down and trading around $79.75 a barrel. The benchmark U.S. Treasury 10-year note is presently fetching 4.326%.

Technically, December gold futures bears have the firm overall near-term technical advantage. Prices are in a four-week-old downtrend on the daily bar chart. Bulls’ next upside price objective is to produce a close above solid resistance at $1,980.00. Bears' next near-term downside price objective is pushing futures prices below solid technical support at $1,900.00. First resistance is seen at today’s high of $1,933.20 and then at $1,938.20. First support is seen at this week’s low of $1,913.60 and then at $1,900.00. Wyckoff's Market Rating: 3.0.

September silver futures bears have the slight overall near-term technical advantage. However, a four-week-old downtrend on the daily bar chart has stalled out. Silver bulls' next upside price objective is closing prices above solid technical resistance at $24.00. The next downside price objective for the bears is closing prices below solid support at $22.00. First resistance is seen at $23.75 and then at $24.00. Next support is seen at $23.00 and then at this week’s low of $22.71. Wyckoff's Market Rating: 4.5.

September N.Y. copper closed up 385 points at 375.70 cents today. Prices closed nearer the session high. The copper bears have the overall near-term technical advantage. Prices are still in a downtrend on the daily bar chart but now just barely. Copper bulls' next upside price objective is pushing and closing prices above solid technical resistance at 390.00 cents. The next downside price objective for the bears is closing prices below solid technical support at the May low of 356.50 cents. First resistance is seen at today’s high of 377.75 cents and then at 380.00 cents. First support is seen at today’s low of 371.60 cents and then at this week’s low of 368.45 cents. Wyckoff's Market Rating: 2.5.

By

Jim Wyckoff

For Kitco News

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David – http://markethive.com/david-ogden

Gold trades lower until you factor in dollar weakness

Gold trades lower until you factor in dollar weakness

Gold would have traded lower today if it was not for the dollar's weakness. The dollar is currently down 0.543 points or 0.52% with the dollar index fixed at 104.615. Concurrently, gold futures basis most active April contract is trading up $7.00 or 0.40% and fixed at $1824.10. This means that dollar weakness accounts for over 100% of today’s gains in gold. The resulting net change of gold is based on the dollar weakness and fractional selling pressure in gold.

The same relationship between gold and the dollar can be seen in the physical or spot market. According to the Kitco Gold Index (KGX), spot gold is currently fixed at $1818.10 after factoring in today’s net gain of $6.90. On closer inspection dollar weakness resulted in spot gold gaining $9.80 with fractional selling pressure taking back $2.90 of those gains.

The question becomes what fundamental events could explain dollar weakness today? For that we need to look at two reports released today.

The first report revealed that new orders for manufactured durable goods decreased by $13 billion or 4.5% coming in at $272.3 billion.

The other report released today was pending home sales in January by the National Association of Realtors. This report revealed that pending home sales improved for the second consecutive month. Collectively all four U.S. regions posted that pending home sales increased by 8.1% month-over-month. However, when you look at the data year over year pending transactions decreased by 24.1%.

When you look at the durable goods and pending home sales (year-over-year) they both indicate that the economy in the United States is contracting. This seems to be the most plausible explanation for dollar weakness today which led to the fractional gains in gold.

By Gary Wagner

Contributing to kitco.com

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David – http://markethive.com/david-ogden

Profit taking routine corrective pullbacks for gold silver

Profit taking, routine corrective pullbacks for gold, silver

Welcome to Kitco News' 2023 Outlook Series. Uncertainty continues to dominate financial markets as central bank monetary policies push the global economy into a recession to cool down inflation. Stay tuned to Kitco News to learn from the experts on how to navigate turbulent financial markets in 2023.

(Kitco News) – Gold and silver prices are weaker in midday U.S. trading Tuesday, after gold scored a nine-month high overnight. Normal downside price corrections, in existing uptrends, were featured in the two metals markets. Profit taking from the shorter-term futures traders was also seen. The gold and silver bulls still have the solid technical advantage. February gold was last down $12.10 at $1,909.60 and March silver was down $0.292 at $24.08.

U.S. stock indexes are weaker at midday on some disappointing corporate earnings reports.

In overnight/weekend news, China got more downbeat economic data, as Covid continues to punish the world's second-largest economy. China's economic growth slowed to 3% in 2022 from 8.1% in 2021, official data said Tuesday. Except for the pandemic year of 2020, that's the worst annual economic growth rate for China since 1976. The dour China news has traders and investors more risk averse to start this holiday-shortened U.S. trading week.

 Royal Mint sees record bullion demand in 2022 as sales increase 25% for gold, 29% for silver

The key outside markets today see the U.S. dollar index higher. Nymex crude oil futures prices are slightly higher and trading around $80.30 a barrel. Meantime, the yield on the benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury note is presently fetching around 3.518%.

Technically, February gold futures prices hit a nine-month high early on today. Bulls have the solid overall near-term technical advantage. A 2.5-month-old uptrend is in place on the daily bar chart. Bulls' next upside price objective is to produce a close above solid resistance at $1,950.00. Bears' next near-term downside price objective is pushing futures prices below solid technical support at $1,870.00. First resistance is seen at today's high of $1,931.80 and then at $1,950.00. First support is seen at today's low of $1,906.80 and then at $1,900.00. Wyckoff's Market Rating: 8.0



March silver futures bulls have the firm overall near-term technical advantage. However, a four-month-old uptrend on the daily bar chart has turned into sideways trading. Silver bulls' next upside price objective is closing prices above solid technical resistance at $25.00. The next downside price objective for the bears is closing prices below solid support at $22.50. First resistance is seen at today's high of $24.67 and then at the January high of $24.775. Next support is seen at $24.00 and then at $23.50. Wyckoff's Market Rating: 7.0.

March N.Y. copper closed up 65 points at 422.25 cents today. Prices closed near the session high today, hit a 6.5-month high and scored a bullish "outside day" up on the daily bar chart. The copper bulls have the solid overall near-term technical advantage. A three-month-old uptrend is in place on the daily bar chart. Copper bulls' next upside price objective is pushing and closing prices above solid technical resistance at 450.00 cents. The next downside price objective for the bears is closing prices below solid technical support at 400.00 cents. First resistance is seen at today's high of 423.70 cents and then at 425.00 cents. First support is seen at 415.00 cents and then at today's low of 411.05 cents. Wyckoff's Market Rating: 8.0.

By Jim Wyckoff

For Kitco News

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David – http://markethive.com/david-ogden