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Inflation, Gold And 3 Things Affecting U.S. Dollar

Published 08/09/2021, 06:03 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

The economic calendar may not be as jammed pack this week compared with last week, but if today’s moves in commodities are a sign, this could be a very active week in the financial markets. 

Gold prices ended the day down 2% after dropping more than 4% at the start of Asian trade. Oil prices settled the day down about the same amount after bouncing off lows. The U.S. dollar was mixed at the start of the New York session, but with Treasury yields turning positive, the greenback ended higher against all of the major currencies. These wild intraday swings can be explained by looking at three main factors affecting investor appetite and, more specifically, the outlook for the U.S. dollar this month. They are monetary tightening, inflation and the Delta coronavirus variant.

The U.S. dollar is strong and commodity prices are weak because Friday’s non-farm payrolls report set the stage for taper talk later this month. Members of the Federal Reserve gather in Jackson Hole at the end of August for their annual symposium, and it is widely believed that they will announce their plans to slow asset purchases in the near future. Gold prices crashed for this very reason but recovered because stocks remained under pressure throughout the New York session. Strong job growth drove stocks to record highs last Friday but equities were unable to extend their gains.

Investors are worried about inflation and the highly contagious Delta variant. U.S. consumer and producer prices are due for release, and while price pressures are expected to rise, the pace of growth could slow. Not only have policy-makers said repeatedly that higher inflation is transitory, but last month’s increase was the largest in 13 years, so deceleration is likely. Lumber prices, which had been trending higher throughout the first six months of the year, plummeted in July and are now at their lowest level since 2018. Used car prices are also down 2.6% from the previous month, according to wholesaler Manheim. Will weaker price growth affect the Fed’s taper plans? Probably not, but it could be the excuse for profit-taking in the U.S. dollar.

The greatest worry – because it could derail everyone’s plans – is the Delta variant. The U.S. is averaging more than 100,000 cases a day, the highest since February. Restrictions and masks mandates are returning across the globe, with many businesses delaying office reopening plans. Investors are worried that if case growth fails to slow, travel and other social activities will. The sell-off in oil, intraday recovery in gold and the decline in stocks are a reflection of the growing anxiety in the markets. We are worried that the markets are underestimating Delta’s ability to crunch demand and cause risk aversion to return. We may already be seeing some signs of that today in the U.S. dollar’s rally. Part of the dollar’s gains can be attributed to good data, but the greenback could also be catching a safe-haven bid.

Aside from U.S. CPI, Tuesday’s German ZEW survey, Thursday’s Q2 UK GDP report and Friday’s New Zealand business PMI index will be numbers to watch.

Latest comments

thanks for the analysis 👍🏽
Cathy, an as usual succinct summary of present state of FX market, the rational behind it and relevant data ahead this week. Great service for your readers. 👍👍👏👏🌹🌹
pls Kathy lien to this I don't know how to use the news for trading ...I can even barely under the whole thing ....pls u giv me a clew on how to use the news tagging a particular currency ?
you can't.
Ebből mi erint engem?
nic
Thank you Cathy for the good analysis and to give such an insight overview
making things up. so if there is virus fears why are markets still rising and gold falling ? excellent analytical skills in reverse
BS report,Real inflation on the ground is 25-30 percent and probably even higher
nice
Thanks Cathy! Cathy may I comment, that gold dropped 4% but S&p climbed. This means that it was not the fear of slow asset purchases. If that was the case, the s&P would have dropped as well. I think gold dropped because the big banks wanted it to drop. Either to buy cheap of make it seem all is well in market. Am I overseeing something? Should'nt all indexes drop on the expectation of slowing down asset purchases? The timing of the drop in gold futures also says a lot, adding to my case.
Omg. Sorry for misspelling your name Kathy. Horrible mistake 🙁.
I liked your comments.S&P climbed because of some stock but alsontookajor hits in othersI believe corrections will come along with inflation making gold as a good investment into anyone's portfolio2k coming for good might not be tomorrow but mark.my word its coming.lol
Good analysis Kathy! Thank you!
Thank you, Kathy, your article is short and clear, as usual
yeah business car
Thanks Kathy
Good work Kathy. Thanks.
thanks
Thank you Kathy
So things are quiet .. relitiveky speaking
Thank you Kay!
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