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Gold: Forget Its 'Safe Haven', Just Follow The Charts

Published 02/05/2021, 04:13 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

With a still-fragile US economy, worrying levels of COVID-19 infections and deaths, and blockbuster pandemic-related spending anticipated in coming months, gold's return to November lows of under $1,800 means its 'safe-haven' tag can be truly abandoned.

XAU/USD Daily

For decades, the yellow metal has been described not just as a hedge against inflation, but also protection against economic and political troubles. Owning gold felt good when fiat currencies showed their vulnerability during financial meltdowns. In times of conflict, one could gaze at commodity price screens and see the green bar soaring on the gold column.  

These days, however, investors with exposure to gold ETFs and futures more often than not see red. What is soaring instead is the dollar and US Treasury yields. Both have been acting as though the United States is out of the woods where the pandemic is concerned.

For months now, gold prices haven’t truly reflected the risk factor to the US economy from the global spread of the UK and South African variants of the virus, and slower-than-anticipated vaccine rollouts. 

Virtually Zero Regard For Geopolitical Risk

It’s the same thing where geopolitical risk is concerned. 

True, the pandemic has whittled down international conflicts to almost zero over the past year, save for the November killing of Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, that came just ten months after the even more high profile assassination of the Islamic Republic’s top general Qassem Soleimani. 

Yet, a bomb could go off in the Middle East today and the price of gold may hardly go up. On the contrary, it might even fall. And some Wall Street analyst will find a ludicrous explanation to make sense of that and the market will be happy to buy it.

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The point is this: in the near-term at least, the only thing investors in gold should be worried about are price charts that give cues on when to go long or short, and the stop losses to apply along the way. Similar relative value comparisons of dollar/yields will help their risk-reward pursuit. 

Charts More Relevant Than Ever Now

For sure, reacting to the right technicals has always been rudimentary to gold trading. Only now they’re more relevant than ever, thanks to Wall Street’s narrative that has completely decimated the safe-haven proponent in gold. 

Thursday’s dump of gold and surge in the dollar and yields came on the back of mildly encouraging US labor market data—i.e. a third straight drop in weekly jobless claims that brought the stats down by 10% over the period, while the actual number itself remained elevated at near 780,000.

The other data on the day that mattered: The Institute of Supply Management’s 58.7 point-reading in January that beat market expectations of 56.8 and December’s actual reading of 57.7. In terms of relevance, the ISM numbers pointed to the strongest growth in the services sector since February 2019. 

While the dollar and the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield deserved a prop on that, the return on the two-year bond remained depressed at December lows.

Options that the Fed would change rates still assumed a small probability of further decline, completely excluding an increase until the end of the year. 

The stock market took full advantage of the upbeat data, with the S&P 500 and NASDAQ racing to record highs.

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Yet, with the Biden administration’s next major stimulus spending for the economy channeling its way toward Congress—either in its entirety of nearly $2 trillion or the sum of a few parts—there was little excuse for gold futures' loss of $44, or 2.4%, that took it to Thursday’s close of $1,791.20 on New York’s COMEX.

Also a recap of points I have made previously: 

  • At a 1.1% yield on the 10-year note, the annual servicing payment would amount to roughly $370 billion. Right now, US national debt is approaching $28 trillion, and total debt-to-GDP sits at a stunning 146%. The US federal budget deficit itself is already at $4.5 trillion or so, after adding the Trump administration’s $3 trillion plus COVID-19 stimulus for last year. 
  • If the 10-year note’s yield rate stands at 2%, coupled with a $30 trillion national debt, annual servicing payments would amount to $660 billion roughly. Annual deficits will continue to make the national debt stack even higher.
  • And while the United States appears to be in the relatively early stages of a monetary expansion cycle, money supply could still increase substantially and set the country up for a return to the 2008/2009 financial crisis days. With the dilution of the fiat monetary system, higher inflation is most certainly on the way.

Indeed, there might be a chance for the US economy to rebound quicker this year than the Federal Reserve expects. If that is the case, then surely there is a chance for inflation to rise too. Historically, gold prices have had a very strong correlation over the long-term basis with monetary base expansion.

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Yet, none of these seem to matter now, as gold bears are allowed to run riot over gold prices, with little support coming in at the higher levels from buyers who probably fear more outsized losses with such bullish exposure.

Just Stick To Technicals For Now

So, back to basics: What do the charts say?

Gold Futures Daily

On my end, Investing.com’s Daily Technical Outlook, unsurprisingly, has a “Strong Sell” on COMEX gold.

The three-stage Fibonacci support that I plotted shows first support at $1,784.31, second at $1,772.25 and third at $1,752.73.

Fibonacci resistance begins at $1,823.35 on my end, which might be a high point at this juncture.

Other analysts are equally bearish as Investing.com’s near-term model.

Says Christopher Lewis at FX Empire:

“Ultimately, the market looks as if it is going to try to reach down towards the $1,767 level. That was the scene of a major hammer that has turn things back around but ultimately, I believe that the support probably extends down to the $1,750 level. If we were to break down below there, then gold would be in serious trouble for a longer-term downward move.”

James Hyerczyk, another technical analyst who posts on that site, says:

“The selling could extend into $1,787.30 to $1,711.70 over the near-term as brokerage clients continue to liquidate their “safe-haven” buys and long positions placed in anticipation of a weaker US Dollar and massive amounts of fiscal and monetary stimulus.”

Jeffrey Halley of online broker OANDA, meanwhile, lends a touch of 1980s nostalgia, musicality and humor to his gold outlook, invoking Spandau Ballet’s hit from that era, aptly called, what else, but Gold:  

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“Gold may feel less Spandau Ballet, and more Spandau Prison in the short-term. Critical support remains the 50.0% Fibonacci of the March to August rally at $1760.00 an ounce. Failure sets up a capitulation trade into next week. Gold, something I should have learned, you're indestructible, but you will look even more indestructible when your price starts with a 15 or 16.”

Make a pick or follow your own chart.

Godspeed and a Happy Weekend.

Disclaimer: Barani Krishnan uses a range of views outside his own to bring diversity to his analysis of any market. He does not own or hold a position in the commodities or securities he writes about.

Latest comments

Good article Barani. I guess we have to accept this for now.
Gold prices could go down to $1750, however it has to rebound from this level to $2000 at least. What we see now in the markets is a just a speculation game because of these robbery tools created by big whales in the financial markets. By robbery tools , I mean short selling, leverage and margin trading. Since gold is a strategic commodity it should not be vulnerable to speculations and gambling ( Leverage and Short Selling ). Gold should be evaluated only based on supply and demand.
...in 2031 when Gold is apx $5,000 noone wil notice this pointy dip @02/21 in the chart anymore
Gold needs to get to the price channel of 1550-1700$. Then it is a buy and hold!
so should we buy gold or sell ? I don't get it
Gold in usd. Gold in euro?
Gold was. Gold is. Gold will always remain one and only safe haven for hedge against crisis, inflation and Geo political uncertainties. Dollar may be showing a bounce back but it's tag of reserve currency is at stake with record national debt and stimulus leading to inflation and currency debasement.
This latest fall in Gold price is clearly a combined effect of price correction and time correction. Longer time frame weekly and monthly charts indicate that the correctional path may extend to 1750-1700. Any bounce back should not be misunderstood as return to bullish chanel until 1900-1970 range is won with weekly close.
Sell off possibly due to MSTR World.Now conference pushing reallocation to BTC...?
Gold is the only metal that it is underpriced, as some people said. Silver made a high mark last week thanks to the Reddit Army after the GameStop stumper. I think Gold should be loaded up to wrap up this week on Wall Street.
I was in the "reddit gamestop trade" since nov 2020. Reddit NEVER bought silver it was a hedge fund media campaign to boost their position. You can't "squeeze" silver lmao
 https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/l71rdv/silver_biggest_short_squeeze_in_the_world_slv_25/ it has been posted in WSB in Reddit few days before the fake squeeze.
The dollar is infinite fairy dust
load up
Bitcoin is the new gold
False breakedown! It will go up soon...buy buy buy🚀🚀🚀
I’m buying too
Everytime someone says "it was always like that, but this time it is different"... I'm interested... and I'm buying ;-)
follow the charts....the USD chart doesnt lie.....its falling since decades with countertrends. The purchasing power dimishes...charts dont lie! No charts goes straight in one direction.....but look the trend over 20 years!
tThe whales shorted lots of money from sales going ETH Watch then bac yo gold what a deal 10 percent profit dailly
Thanks Barani, good article. This one of the few things I keep on buying every time there is a meaningful daily drop and it approaches key support level. My fib extension is in a very long time span: 2000 - 2011 - 2016. Then, except all the different narratives about M1 and M2 expansion, supply and demand; I follow a model that aims to mimic a "fair value", that's based on: CPI, DXY and US real yield. This still shows a fair value for gold around ~2.2k, while for silver ~29. I am also accounting that in 2019 gold was still rising, with an interest rate of 2.5%, that now shall also be discounted. That's why, among almost all the other asset classes, I still find gold at good price. Other points of strength (historically) raises with inflation (real yield & CPI), it handles crashes quite well.
I find also other commodities even more convenient, although they might appear a bit riskier, "platinum" and "sugar" are some of my key bets for the next 5-8y.
 Thanks always for your illuminating perspective, falec. Bests.
Im.not trusting the dollar, I just keep buying gold silver bitcoin
The alternatives, yes.
the more it goes down the more i buy the physical u can keep yr helicopter dollar worthless junk
Dollar isn't junk yet but theoretically there. The only thing that keeps it bid is its status as reserve currency.
But question is what kind of contribution does gold make to our economy?
i read that theres an entire industry that sells wearable gold
Jewelleries, medals, coins, denistry, investment (similar to BTC ... supply constrained), electronics, etc. When risk free rate is at zero bound, non- yielding assets like commodities, crypto, etc become more "palatable"
Buy the dip. Ignore very short-term price movements. In 1 year, a double-digit return is highly likely.
That's a good, practical strategy Antonio. If I say it, I'll be accused of having an unsubstantiated bullish bias. Therefore, my call is follow the charts in the near term but also follow your gut in the longer term. And forget the "safe haven" tag. The price is being artificially depressed so that tag no longer applies. Bests.
well a lot of people is still in denial stage. 2k may never come back anymore juz like oil 100.
On oil, I'm totally with you, Edward.
Sorry dear writer I can’t throw my brain in garbage and ignore what is happening in reality, just because your system is not accepting its death, I know as well that all of real investors do share the same thinking with me, maybe some of the teenagers traders; who think that bubbles are assets would believe your writing. The more you deny the truth, the more it hurts. I bought physical gold, soon I’ll be buying physical silver Insha’Allah, holding for long and very prepared for the up coming :)
Follow your gut Abdelraziq. All I'm advocating is stop thinking of it as a "safe haven" because that tag has been decimated beyond belief by the bullion-playing banks.
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