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Gold: How Much Lower From Here? Not Too Much Probably 

Published 07/08/2022, 05:17 AM
Updated 08/14/2023, 06:57 AM

Gold bulls appear to have caught a break from this week’s blitzkrieg that sent the yellow metal’s prices to 10-month lows. The question is will it last? 

And when will the pivotal moment come for a turnaround in the fortunes of those long on bullion?

As Phillip Streible, precious metals strategist at Blue Line Futures, said at the end of June:

“Gold has, without doubt, had a disappointing second quarter. But on the bright side, it’s probably right where it’s going to start rebounding.”

That, of course, hasn’t happened, with the most-active gold futures contract on New York’s COMEX having lost another $75, or 4.5%, from the near $1,810 level it stood at when Streible spoke.   

But Streible, who did buy gold in the lower $1,800s in June, had simple yet profound words on gold’s likely behavior.

“It’s normally the case; people start giving up on gold, and then it comes back,” he said.

“The dollar's strength will likely dissipate once the Fed can no longer surprise us with its rate hikes. And then, bond yields will surge again, indicating inflation, which works well for gold.”

As of Thursday, the Dollar Index, which had a scintillating rally earlier this week to 20-year highs of 107.07, seems to have paused on its run.

The dollar is still up 12% this year, adding to last year’s 6% gain. The back-to-back annual gain in the US currency was for one reason only: bets that the Federal Reserve will embark on one rate hike after another to quell the monster of an inflation created from two years of money printing and runaway federal aid spending during the coronavirus pandemic. 

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Since March, the Fed has been delivering on those bets, raising rates three times from a range of zero to 0.25% in February to reach between 1.5% and 1.75% by June. 

This week a Reuters poll of forex analysts showed that the dollar will likely remain strong for at least the next three months on expectations of aggressive Fed rate hikes and safe-haven appeal stemming from global recession fears. The central bank has another four opportunities before the end of this year to bring rates even higher, with the market expecting a final range between 3.75% and 4.0% for 2022.

The surging dollar has been an anathema to gold as the greenback and bullion covet the safe-haven crowd. So far, the dollar seems to be winning this race despite gold’s entrenched notion as not only a highly desirable metal for jewelry and other uses but also as a store of value.

Typically, gold and the dollar move in opposite directions—this week’s 10-month low in gold and 20-year high in the dollar being a good case. But the two occasionally move in tandem too, especially when both are being sought as safe-havens. It’s rare but it has happened.  

So, the answer to when gold will rebound to recapture $1,800 and above has probably much to do with how the dollar—and, relatedly, bond yields—performs. 

But there’s another burning question that gold watchers are carrying: Is the worst of the dollar-triggered sell-off over? Or how much lower can bullion go in the near term?

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It’s crucial for shorts who want to take gold to $1,600 territory and below, that its sell-off doesn’t lose its momentum here. 

Gold Daily

Charts by skcharting.com with data from Investing.com

The answer, as charts from skcharting.com suggest, is that gold may already have, or is close, to bottoming out and probably has not too much more to lose.

“Gold is not far from the bottom,” said Sunil Kumar Dixit, chief technical strategist at skcharting.com, who uses the spot bullion price for his plotting. Adding:

“In the most extreme case, gold has another $50 to probably max $80 to lose from the $1,730.70 low of this week. But the more likely case is a drop of another $30 to $50 to reach a bottom of between $1,680 and $1,700.”

Gold Weekly

Despite the headline 10-month low for gold this week, the yellow metal has remained in a tight trading range of between $1,749 and $1,730.

Sustained down pressure from the $1,749 resistance can push gold for a  retest of $1,730, exposing it towards troughs of  $1,720-$1,700-$1,680.

Gold Monthly

In the worst-case scenario, the 50-month Exponential Moving Average of $1,667 and the 200-week Simple Moving Average of $1,650 will likely act as hard floor to boomerang gold higher.

Conversely, a short-term rebound targeting $1,760-$1,780 initially looks promising for gold.

The weekly stochastic reading of 3/11 and daily stochastic of 7/6 indicate extremely oversold conditions for gold and call for an immediate rebound.

Disclaimer: Barani Krishnan uses a range of views outside his own to bring diversity to his analysis of any market. For neutrality, he sometimes presents contrarian views and market variables. He does not hold positions in the commodities and securities he writes about.

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Latest comments

Thanks barani, i expect a rebound to 1770 max 1780 and then back down, hopefully we can see 1680 before a major turn around, sunil ans barani how do you see this playing out
Shaheen Hays. Yes. The short term rebound towards resistance cum supply zone and retest of recent lows followed by a new low to the extent of 1700-1690-1680 is a broad possibility. On extended selling spree, a deeper slide to 1650 should be a value zone for unwinding shorts and buyers may come in at the test of these areas.
Current rebound from 1732 should aim for 1780-1810 If Gold finds some buying support above 1810-1820, a laboured rally may start for 1850-1880 Rejection from initial supply zone 1780-1810 may push Gold down again for 1700-1680
How much higher from here? No stimulus, rising rates and QT.
New Gold Mines are found in UGANDA...which is worth 12 Trillion..You can guess where Gold will be heading...
ha ha!, Reeeaaalllyyy...
Thank you for this insight
Gold won’t have a meaningful rally until the dollar goes down. 1680 - 1750 good level to accumulate. RSI in the 20’s
you will be safe to assume, end of rate hike cycle when gold hits 640. not until then
Welcome, "Mr $640 gold" . Was wondering where you were :)
Thank you for sharing the article 💯
Thanks for being a reader, Mohd Izhar 🙏🏽
When gold was around 2000, and I called for much lower gold, all hyenas cried out. 1740 is only the start. Fed will not stop raising rates until gold reaches USD 640. that means, fed will raise rates to kill gold all the way, so it will never again raise its ugly head.
Don't feel disappointed. I believe all hedge funds and Institutions might have taken short positions on your calls from 2070 and are going to book massive pips around 1690-1650
Murali Krishna. Don't feel disappointed. I believe all hedge funds and Institutions might have taken short positions on your calls from 2070 and are going to book massive pips around 1690-1650.
The moment Feds will pivot allmighty dollar will collapse giving room to gold go way way higher. The only thing that is propping up dollar is that inverstors are selling their investments in dollars.
The way Dollar has clocked 107, two decades high, makes it overbought and the heat should subside with time. A retest towards mean deviation area of 100 and 97 is a broad possibility in mid term.
flat
There is a H&S top pattern, starting from December 2021 and kt has been completed. The target of this pattern point to 1530. But gold also invalidated a previous huge H&S bottom formation which extends from August 2020 to the start of Ukraninan war.
Mr Doodle. While H&S patterns are highly reliable, the current bearish momentum has 50 Month EMA 1668 and 200 Week SMA 1650 as major challenges that have potential to seize the velocity of descent.
I think much lower. It's a barbarous relic don't you know? And it doesn't pay interest.
let the poor dog bark. he had no gold
let the poor dog bark. he had no gold
let the poor dog bark. he had no gold
When C.B's have raised rated not even half way and QT is still to show it's impact, GLD is struggling to hold 1700. Imagine what happens in second half, it has to do to 1500$
It would take a quarter close below 1650 for Gold primary trend to turn bearish, until then optimism can stay.
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