CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Gold outlook: Metal rebounds as dollar and yields fall

Article By: ,  Market Analyst

Gold found support along with the major FX pairs in the first half of Tuesday’s session, as the dollar and bond yields fell back after their eye-catching gains in recent weeks. As we transition to the second half of the day and look forward to the rest of the week, it remains to be seen whether the recovery will hold this time around. For what it is worth, I maintain a bullish gold outlook.

 

 

Long term gold outlook remains positive

 

While the short-term gold outlook remains a little murky, there is little doubt in my mind that the longer-term gold forecast is positive, owing to the fact global monetary policy can only start to loosen from here.

 

Hawkish Fed repricing likely priced in

 

Granted, there has been a bit of hawkish repricing in US interest rates of late, thanks to US data remaining resilient and inflation sticky. A final 25 basis point Fed rate hike in June appears to be a foregone conclusion and most likely priced in by now. But the higher the interest rates go, the sharper the eventual economic slowdown is likely to be. So, interest rates are going to come back down and perhaps more sharply than would appear right now.

 

Weaker Chinese and European data point to looser monetary policy

 

The economic slowdown for the rest of the world, while not as bad as it could have been in these circumstances, certainly point to falling interest rates.

 

Indeed, we saw that with the latest manufacturing PMI data from Europe highlighting growth concerns last week. The PMI data certainly suggests the “higher for longer” interest rates narrative may soon become a thing of the past.

 

Today, we had a smaller-than-expected rise in Spanish CPI, which came in at 3.2% annual rate compared to 3.6% expected and 4.1% previously. The sharper drop in Spanish CPI has boosted hopes that German and Eurozone inflation data, due for release later in the week, would also surprise to the downside, reducing the need for the ECB to remains uber-hawkish.

 

Emerging market turmoil boost appeal of gold

 

Meanwhile, you have economic crises in many other parts of the world, most notably in some emerging market countries, where inflation has been spiralling out of control like Argentina, Turkey and Pakistan. What’s more China is continuing to struggle as reflected by its slumping equity market and yuan, with the latter weakening past 7.1 per dollar for the first time since November.

 

The economic struggles in these countries should hold back output in the rest of the world to some degree, which should mean looser monetary policy, ceteris paribus. But more to the point, economic uncertainty and high inflation is precisely why gold prices are at or near record.

 

Yields fall as debt ceiling deal gets closer

 

Meanwhile, it looks increasingly likely that Congress will pass a debt deal to prevent a default. Investors’ required rate of return has thus fallen by holding US government debt, as the risk of default has fallen in their eyes. This is reflected in falling bond yields. As yields dip, up goes the appeal of zero-yielding assets on a relative basis. The yen has risen sharply along with gold and silver, precisely for this reason.

 

Gold outlook: Technical analysis

Gold has bounced right from where it needed to: around $1935. This is where its bullish trend line and horizontal support converges.

 

Despite today’s bounce though, the near-term outlook remains murky as prices remain inside a short-term downward channel. The bulls will want gold to break out of this channel to the upside to signal that the short-term bear trend is over.

 

Recent price action on gold has frustrated the bulls ever since it failed to hold its break out to a new record high earlier this month. Every time it has printed some bullish-looking candle traders have sold into it.

 

Will that change in light of today’s recovery remains to be seen. At the time of writing, gold was testing prior support just below $1960. Gold still needs to move above $1970ish resistance to tip the balance back in the bulls’ favour. In this event, we would become more confident in providing a more positive gold forecast.

 

Source: TradinView.com

 

-- Written by Fawad Razaqzada, Market Analyst

Follow Fawad on Twitter @Trader_F_R

 

 

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