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Gold Volatility May Not Be Over Yet

Published 08/28/2020, 04:34 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

On the eve of Jay Powell’s ground-breaking speech on the new inflation direction for America, I wrote that the gold market was giving few clues on how it was likely to respond to the Fed Chair’s address.

I said so because of a concern that was palpable to me. It was the early hours of Wednesday’s Asian trading and the spot price of gold was persistently down about $10 to $15 per ounce. It was wilting under the strength of the dollar, which had suddenly been transformed from a pariah that almost no one wanted to touch a month ago to a prince charming of an asset. 

A $10-$15 slide in gold is, of course, small potatoes in the grand scheme of things. But that the yellow metal was still sliding and not rallying with just over 24 hours left to an event clearly flagged to be gold-bullish, told me that the biggest banks, hedge funds and trading houses might have other plans.

Despite that early weakness, Wednesday produced the biggest daily rally in gold in a week, allowing the spot price to settle above $1,950 the first time since Aug 18. The scene looked set for a re-test of $1,980 on Thursday, which if successful, could usher gold back into the celebrated $2,000 and above highs.

As it turned out, spot gold never quite got to the $1,980 point on Thursday, being stopped at $1,976.60. The benchmark's futures contract on Comex, did set a best of $1,987. From there though, it all was the way down, back to the $1930s for both the spot and futures contracts. 

Second Booby Trap In A Fortnight For Gold Longs

Effectively, it was the second booby trap set in a fortnight for gold longs. And, once again, it involved the Fed (the first was from Aug. 11 when the Central Bank’s July minutes telegraphing a well-intended reason for rejecting yield curve controls became a ludicrous trigger for buying the dollar and booting gold).

 

XAU/USD Daily

Charts courtesy: Sunil Kumar Dixit

Looking back to Wednesday, I realize I wasn’t wrong that the gold market had exhibited few clues in its final hours ahead of Powell’s speech—that it would respond negatively to a landmark change in the Fed’s way of interpreting inflation to better manage the U.S. economy and employment in the future.

The clues were all there in the media and in the reams of research issued by the banks and major trading houses that had flogged to death over the past week the “news” that Powell would announce an average inflation target. With virtually no element of surprise left in his speech, the Fed chair stuck to the script that had been in print for days. 

If anything, he left out the one thing that these traders wanted to hear more of—an unambiguous Fed promise to buy more assets. I don’t blame Powell for refusing to serve more opioids to stimulus-hungry junkies; this was a speech on a new policy framework, not his monthly news conference on rates. 

Classic Buy-The-Rumour, Sell-The-Fact

Where gold was concerned, what ensued was a classic buy-the-rumour and sell-the-fact. Oh, the S&P 500 got a free record high by the way, as stocks suddenly looked “red hot” with the Fed intending to leave rates at near-zero for the next few years. 

So, it really amuses me to see the financial community trying to explain away Thursday’s market madness to investors’ wisdom in seeing how Treasury yields and the dollar will benefit from the Fed’s new targets, conveniently leaving out real assets like gold from the process. It’s even more laughable to see their justification for the Dollar Index's loss of its crucial 93-handle in Friday’s Asian trading amid a run-up in gold—yes, real assets are in vogue again!

Jeffrey Halley, one of the best market cynics out there, perhaps phrased it best. The senior market analyst for OANDA in Asia Pacific said the Fed’s average inflation target was basically “an admission that recovery is not going to be the nirvana-like V-shape so often postulated by the gnomes of the stock market." He added:

"I expect the word ‘inflation’ to be twisted by the FOMO gnomes of the stock market into another bullish signal. Inflation means company earnings rise, yes? Buy Mortimer, buy.”

FOMO or Fear Of Missing Out, is what prompts investors to load up on risk across multiple markets to profit from anywhere possible.

Halley’s New York-based colleague at OANDA, Ed Moya, also had an interesting observation about how the Fed was evolving into a Bank of Japan by becoming unbelievably “patient” with rate hikes. He said:

“With the adoption of allowing inflation to overshoot their target, the Fed is slowly becoming the BOJ,” 

So, what’s in store for gold in this new era of near-zero for longer rates and traders’ manipulation of the Fed’s objectives for their ends?

An ‘Anything Goes’ Outlook

Basically, it’s an ‘anything goes’ outlook. In the immediate term, my view is that we are not done with the downside correction yet— something which independent technical analyst Sunil Kumar Dixit agrees with. He said:

“For gold, rejection at $1967 to 1970 may attract a further sell-off, pushing the metal toward $1,930-$1,915-$1,898 & $1,862. But bear in mind that there will be many buying opportunities on support areas every time the metal is pushed down and it will pop its head higher. They can keep on pushing it down the hill till the higher low is established on the longer time frame, that will mark the reversal.”


DXY Daily

That did not mean gold’s nemesis, the dollar, was safe either. He added:

 “Any upside move in the Dollar Index may attempt a retest of Thursday’s high of 93.35, beyond which rests 93.48, but the red line is 93.80. I expect the DX to break Thursday’s low of 92.35 at some point, reaching further down to the previous low of 92.11, and take momentary support at 91.85.” 

Latest comments

will gold retest 1874
The caption says it all. When Fed chair speaks, world listens. The irony is such events are abused by rogue operators triggering more stops than TP resulting in extreme volatility that defies all logic. The tug of war between bulls and bears is nothing new but insane volatility inflicts retail traders. Very well analysed and explained sire accept all my humble compliments.
Thanks much, Sunil, for your empathy with the situation in gold. And do accept my compliments too for your great charts and outlook on price potentials. Bests!
I think golds real value right now is 1750-1800 if you look at all the big mines they are calculating with a 1200-1500 ounce price, remember lots of these big mines have heads of banks sitting on their boards so they have better info than we do that means gold is majorly overvalued right now in real terms. However paper gold will probably have another small rally and sooner or later someone will anounce a real vaccine not sputnik 05 and gold will be back at 1750, i reckon by end of the year
The fact that the fed has had to accept higher inflation is very telling. The printing over time that has been going on is starting to show in policy. I see gold correcting but it will take off again. Its simply another buying opportunity.
I've always wondered if the majority of people read anything beyond the headline in a story before turning judgemental. It's proven now that they don't. Anyone who had read this through would have found that it's a searing commentary on the insane rally in the dollar and events that came after Powell's speech. In other words, it's an endorsement of everything that gold stands for. All I've said is the market was horridly volatile and anything was likely to happen, including the potential for more correction due to manipulation by the big banks. I also said that the dollar wasn't safe either. Yet, the headline was enough to get every bull screaming nonsense. Look, I don't trade and my job is to present all the variables in the marketplace for you to make an intelligent decision. Whether you are long or short, it doesn't matter to me. I just want you to have adequate information on the market's range. Good luck!
To continue, I had a few headline variations to capture succinctly what I meant to say. At 4 AM ET, as this was going out, the rebound was still questionable, appearing like a deadcat bounce. But the point of the whole story is the insane volatility, thus the amendment to reflect that. Have a wonderful weekend everyone!
Gold bugs here are losing it because their precious God is not being marked up, lol! Were this article to be bullish they would all be chanting ludicrous and fantastical prices to the upside. In short, an empty barrel rattles the most and that certainly applies to the gold bugs. Great article, thank you.
You are so right, thank you!
You must be shorting PM.. Fed publicly admitted the inflation is inevitable, and I believe it is more than 2%. The correction in PM market due to the uncertanties about the central bank policies are already priced in since yesterday. I bet the price will go through the previous resistance level of $2,200 in a few weeks.
how do u have inflation when spending is so weak???
Paper gold Futures contract manipulation is clear in broad daylight!. Love those commentators with their comments. Just keep reminding that gold is at new highs constantly in all other major currencies for years. If they fed controlled gang allow gold to trade natirally higher, thats the end of the dollar reserve system. They are going to fight it tooth and nails.
Agree with Adil its going up from here..no more stops to trigger downside losses after last night flushed out
yes Gold needs another 10 trillion from fed in order to gain 50 bucks! lol are they kidding us. Gold is a solid buy. Noone lost ever buying gold
Tell that to 90 year old who bought in 2011 :)
he even sits on some gains, check your facts
 not if he died in 2015 :-)
I have detected a turn around signal last night . And sure enough gold is on the run . This time its for real over 2000
yeap still not over . it will drive the longs nuts for the time being.
It is over, now that central bankers scam goes next level...
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