Gold Finds Relief But Risks Tilted To Downside

Bullion, Gold, Bar, Gold Bar, Currency, Wealth, Finance

Image Source: Pixabay
 

But will today’s FOMC minutes match the recent hawkish Fedspeak? And – more importantly for gold traders – will the dollar and yields have further to run on the Fed story?

  • Rising bond yields increase the opportunity cost of holding zero-yielding assets
  • The dollar index continues to print bullish price action
  • All eyes on FOMC minutes at 19:00 GMT

Gold has bounced back a little ahead of the publication of FOMC meeting minutes, but it is far too early to talk up the prospects of a bottom. That’s because of the renewed strength in bond yields we have seen since the start of this month when the Fed and ECB both appeared more hawkish than the markets had anticipated. Incoming data since those central bank meetings have been mostly better than expected, with US inflation and jobs data, in particular, supporting the view that more rate hikes are needed to cool the economy. But will today’s FOMC minutes match the recent hawkish Fedspeak? And – more importantly for gold traders – will the dollar and yields have further to run on the Fed story?

There’s been some talk that policymakers are looking to return to 50 basis point rate hikes again, but I highly doubt this is going to be the case as the Fed has already tightened its policy aggressively and will now go in with smaller increments so as to avoid an unwanted hard landing. Still, markets have realized that the Fed wants to keep its contractionary monetary policy in place longer than they had expected at the back end of last year and the start of this year, owing to further improvement in US data and sticky inflation.

Correspondingly, the dollar has found good support, and stocks have come under pressure, along with precious metals. The Dollar Index is looking perky, which is a major factor weighing on buck-denominated gold:

DXY

 Source: StoneX and TradingView.com

All eyes are now on the FOMC minutes, due to be published at 19:00 GMT. If the FOMC minutes mirror the recent hawkish rhetoric from the Fed, then this is likely to push bond yields further higher, or at least keep them elevated near recent levels.

The 2-year yield is now approaching the high hit in November at 4.881% following the renewed hawkish tone at the Fed. If it gets there, this will further reduce and increase the opportunity cost of holding non-interest-bearing commodities.

2 yr

Source: StoneX and TradingView.com

In fact, it is not just the US where yields are on the rise. If you look at the benchmark 10-year yields across the world, you will notice they have been on the rise since the start of the month:

yields 10 yr

Source: StoneX and TradingView.com

With global yields rising, some investors would argue that putting money into government bonds to earn a fixed, guaranteed, income is better than speculating on gold and other assets on capital appreciation.

This is especially the case after gold failed to hold its breakout above that key $1880 to $1900 resistance area earlier this month. The breakdown has clearly disappointed the bulls, some of whom were looking for a move north of $2K and now find themselves wondering whether the metal has topped out again.

Recent price action has been bearish and for that reason, we continue to favor the bearish setups over bullish.

gold

Source: StoneX and TradingView.com

If the FOMC minutes and other incoming data fuel hawkish Fed bets, then gold could drop to the next potential support area of around $1800 next. Otherwise, if the FOMC minutes appear to be rather dovish then we could see a relief recovery towards that noted $1800 to $1900 resistance range again. Whatever happens, gold bulls will need to see a confirmed reversal signal before looking to step back on the long side as the risks remain tilted to the downside amid the recent developments across the financial markets.


More By This Author:

Technical Tuesday: Nasdaq, Yields, WTI and GBP/JPY
Markets Mixed As Investors Eye Bigger Events
Gold Extends Drop On Strong US Data

Disclaimer: The information on this web site is not targeted at the general public of any particular country. It is not intended for distribution to residents in any country where such ...

more
How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.