Select date

May 2024
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

Market Report: Awaiting developments…

5-9-2020 < SGT Report 21 418 words
 

by Alasdair Macleod, GoldMoney:


Gold and silver drifted lower this week in moderate volumes for Comex gold and low volumes for silver. This morning in Europe gold traded at $1935, down $29 on the week, and silver was $26.70, down $1.35. This consolidation phase has now lasted nearly a month.


This inflation driven run commenced on 23 March when the Fed, after cutting its funds rate to 0% from 1% the previous week, announced infinite inflation in view of the lockdowns taking place at that time. The five-month run to all-time highs for gold in early August can be viewed as an adjustment in the price to take account of the Fed’s covid-driven monetary policy. The official story, swallowed by the investment community and still being pushed today, is that of a V-shaped recovery once the lockdowns end.



Screen Shot 2020 09 04 at 1.17.42 PM


Now that businesses and consumers are cautiously emerging from their covid bunkers, precious metals markets are waiting to see if the V-shaped recovery is intact. If not, we can expect a second wave of monetary easing, signalled by Jay Powell in his Jackson Hole speech last week.


The pattern of trading in gold suggests that hedge funds which have been long gold and short dollars have been reversing their trade, having seen the dollar’s trade weighted index slide to a low of 91.75 on Tuesday. This is shown in our next chart.


Screen Shot 2020 09 04 at 1.18.03 PMThe dollar’s TWI is at an interesting juncture. The fall from the 23 March peak would have involved hedge funds and other non-bank institutions unwinding positions in the fx swap market, and a few fellow travellers shorting dollars and buying yen or euros to ride the new trend. Conventionally, this leaves dollars oversold and ready for a bounce. Furthermore, there is a pause in the hectic increase seen in money aggregates such as M1.


So far, there is little evidence of foreign selling, which according to US Treasury TIC figures own 20% of all US securities outstanding, and $6.223 trillion bank deposits and short-term bills. But only this morning, China’s state-run Global Times in a front-page article announced China “may reduce its holdings of US Treasury bonds” (selling over $200bn) and might dump them all “as the ballooning US federal deficit increases default risks and the Trump administration continues its blistering attack on China”.


Read More @ GoldMoney.com



Print