Jerome Powell says that the economy’s path ahead likely to be challenging

Jerome Powell says that the economy's path ahead likely to be challenging

The primary mandate of the Federal Reserve has been to prioritize the goal of maximum employment at the top of the list. Not since the days of the Great Depression has this task been so daunting. Last week an additional 1.5 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits even though there have been signs and sources touting that the economy has been improving.

For the week ending on June 6, the number of Americans receiving unemployment benefits was 20.5 million individuals. That calculated to an unemployment rate of 14.1%. The Fed is on record forecasting that the unemployment rate will go down to 9.3% by the end of 2020. Although that is roughly 1/3 lower than the current rate it is well above the former rate of just 3.5% recorded in February. It is data such as this that has resulted in such a cautionary tone by the Federal Reserve. It is also the primary reason that the Fed is struggling with an uphill battle for the American worker.

Powell speaks to Youngstown leaders

In a speech today made via videoconference to the local leaders of Youngstown, Ohio, the Fed Chairman said that, “The U.S. economic recovery from the novel coronavirus epidemic is set to be challenging and there will be no quick fix.”

"We will make our way back from this, but it will take time and work … The path ahead is likely to be challenging. Lives and livelihoods have been lost, and uncertainty looms large. "

According to the New York Times, “Earlier this week, in two separate appearances before lawmakers in the U.S. Congress, Powell made plain that the United States faces a long overall recovery despite recent encouraging economic data on job gains and consumer spending.”

St. Louis Federal Reserve bank President, James Bullard said that he “was hopeful the worst of the economic crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic may have passed in April, but the U.S. economy is not yet in the clear… I definitely don't think we're out of the woods. We're still at a high, high risk level here.”

Add to these genuine concerns about the economic fallout of the pandemic are the increasing tensions between the United States and China. North Korea’s current posturing in regards to South Korea. The skirmish on the Chinese and India border.

It is those types of warnings and geopolitical hotspots that may have a sobering effect, tempering recent gains in US equities. It could also create some very potent factors which could develop into a perfect storm scenario taking gold beyond this year’s current high of $1788 as it trades above $1800 by the end of the year. It might also have provided the needed kick to allow market participants to refocus upon the safe haven assets like gold.

 

 

By Gary Wagner

David

Gold pricing; the last four years and $500 later

Gold pricing; the last four years and $500 later

It is important to have realistic goals in terms of where we believe gold pricing is headed, and more importantly how long it will take to get there. First and foremost, we must acknowledge the tremendously large move that we have seen over the last four trading years. The multiyear correction began in the middle of 2011 and concluded at the beginning of 2016.

This correction took gold pricing from its all-time record high above $1900 per ounce to just above $1000 per ounce. In other words, gold has lost almost approximately half of its value in five years. However, that all changed when gold pricing dropped to a low of 1045 at the end of 2015 and began to rise in 2016. By April 2016 gold had gained a little over $300 and traded to its highest value since the correction at $1378.10.

Market participants and investors remember the period between the middle of 2016 through 2019 when gold prices had tremendous resistance at $1380 and had three failed attempts at taking out that price point. It seemed as though a break above $1400 was unachievable for a protracted time period.

Finally, in 2019 we actually saw gold prices begin to make a strong bullish run to higher pricing. In January 2019 gold was trading roughly at $1280 per ounce, and by August of that year it would climb to its highest trading value of the year reaching $1560 in just eight months. After a short correction, gold pricing moved back into rally mode and closed at $1560.

This year we have seen tremendous price swings but the result has been that gold trading to its highest price point since the multiyear correction ended in 2016 hitting $1788 per ounce.

Currently prices have been trading sideways for the last three months. As it stands now gold futures have been trading in a tight range and are currently fixed at $1730 per ounce. More so in the last 6 months in which gold has risen over $500 the U.S. dollar has moved an astonishing 7 whole points higher from a low of about 95.50 to 103.72 three weeks later back to where it rests currently 97.42.

While many gold traders and investors have been frustrated at the lack of movement to the upside in gold it is important to take a historical perspective of where gold prices have been over the last four years.

While many analysts including myself are looking for higher pricing this year, most likely it will not be a decisive and clear path to the upside. Rather it will be a series of peaks and valleys that I believe will take gold prices take to $1800 and above by the fourth quarter of this year. The facts are that since 2019 gold has recovered roughly $500 of the value lost during the multiyear correction. Currently pricing is just under $200 from its all-time high.

This year has been ripe with fundamental events that have sent the global economy into a downward spiral. The global pandemic is far from being over and economic fallout that will follow has not even begun. Add to that the geopolitical hotspots that have recently surfaced. China and India have moved troops to the border between those two countries. North Korea recently blew up the liaison office in Kaesong, signaling hostilities between the North and South. China has been imposing new security laws in Hong Kong. Lastly the trade war between the United States and China not only remains at an impasse, but the phase-one agreement reached earlier this year have begun to unravel.

The current fundamentals in play could have a profound impact on where gold pricing heads towards the end of 2020.

 

 

By Gary Wagner
Contributing to kitco.com

 

David

Gold price to break record by year-end; bullion premiums normalizing – Peter Hug

Gold price to break record by year-end; bullion premiums normalizing – Peter Hug

Gold prices could see 2011 highs of $1,920 an ounce or higher, said Peter Hug, global trading director of Kitco Metals, who noted that a full economic recovery won’t materialize until later next year.

While seasonal softness is expected for the yellow metal during the summer months, the medium term trajectory is still constructive, Hug said.

“Short-term, especially given the seasonal factors, [gold prices] have a bit of softness, but by year-end I think the 2011 high in gold, which is $1,920, will be there or higher,” he said.

Pandemic fears are still far from over, Hug said, and many fundamental risks to economic growth are likely to remain until at least next year, noting that unemployment unlikely to fall below 10% by year-end, in contrast to the Federal Reserve’s projection of 9% by year-end.

Prolonged damage to the economy could see another correction in equities, he added, and should another correction take place for risk assets, gold may be pulled down with stocks before another rally were to take place.

“I don’t think that would be bullish for the metals. I think the initial reaction for the metals would be lower as people begin to panic and start to raise cash,” he said.

Meanwhile, bullion premiums have come down for most products.

“A couple of weeks back when I was on the show, I indicated that we strongly advised our clients not to buy physical and chase the premiums and our clients have been rewarded accordingly. Gold Buffalo and Eagle premiums have come down to pre-COVID prices,” he said, adding that some logistical challenges for transporting bullions across the globe still remain.

 

By Kitco News

David

Thieves make off with C$10 million in silver bars

Thieves make off with C$10 million in silver bars

Robbers used fake documents to steal $10 million of silver bars from a Montreal-based transportation company.

On January 20 robbers took possession of a container filled with 596 silver ingots using fake documents, according to a report by CTV News.

The police are asking for tips that could solve the case. Call the Info-Crime line at 514-393-1133. A reward of up to $2,000 will be given to anyone who can provide information leading to an arrest.

 

By Kitco News

David

U.S. equities and the U.S. dollar weigh heavily on gold pricing

U.S. equities and the U.S. dollar weigh heavily on gold pricing

There were mixed results in the precious metals today, with extreme dollar weakness providing a tailwind. While gold traded lower on the day, the industrial precious metals including platinum, palladium and silver all closed with gains. The industrial precious metals benefited from the reversal in U.S. equities from negative to positive on the day.

However, the most noteworthy aspect in the precious metals’ futures market today was the exaggerated lows achieved in trading overseas, and with the exception of gold, the recovery from negative to positive territory.

Jitters in equities worldwide created volatility as market participants became more concerned about the potential for a second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. Platinum futures recovered from an intraday low of $792.40, before recovering and gaining 0.82%, and closing at $825.50. Silver traded to a low of $17.015, before recovering and closing in the positive at $17.505. Palladium briefly broke below $1900, trading to a low of $1889.50, but closing up 0.3% and closing at $1945 per ounce.


Gold futures basis most active August contract closed down by $5.10, and settled at $1732.40. Gold was also under dramatic pressure in trading overseas taking gold futures to a low today of $1706.20. If not for extreme dollar weakness gold would’ve have sustained a much greater drawdown than it did today. The U.S. dollar index lost 0.72%, and closed at 96.63. If not for dollar weakness today gold futures would have dropped by over a full percentage point, rather than the 0.32% lost today.

Overnight gold began to trade under pressure in Europe, as new information indicated that China had lockdown parts of Beijing. China shut down the biggest wholesale food market in Beijing to curtail the rise of new cases of the virus. In fact, according to MarketWatch 36 of China’s 49 new Covid-19 cases were traced to a wholesale market supplies much of the city’s meats and vegetables.

This week’s congressional testimony by the chairman of the Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell will begin tomorrow, and conclude on Wednesday. However, it was steps taken today by the Fed that caused U.S. equities to reverse.

According to MarketWatch, “Stocks rose Monday after the Federal Reserve said it is expanding the scope of its $750 billion emergency corporate debt loan facility to include individual corporate bonds, while also scrapping some earlier restrictions for potential borrowers.”

Although gold did close lower on the day, strong dollar weakness along with the Federal Reserve’s actions curtailed a steep decline. Continued dollar weakness and an accommodative Fed could be supportive of gold pricing later this week.

Wishing you as always good trading and good health,

 

By Gary Wagner
Contributing to kitco.com

 

David

Market volatility is bullish for gold: Is $1,800 back on the table next week?Anna Golubova Anna Golubova

Market volatility is bullish for gold: Is $1,800 back on the table next week?Anna Golubova Anna Golubova

Gold is on a roll as market volatility is working in favor of higher prices amid renewed concerns about the U.S. economic recovery and the second COVID-19 wave. But is it enough to finally break gold out of its trading range?

Gold has turned its losses around this week with the precious metal rallying 3.5% since last Friday's close after the Federal Reserve ruled out a V-shaped recovery in the U.S.

At the time of writing, August Comex gold futures were trading at $1,742.50, up 0.16% on the day, after hitting a weekly high of $1,754.80 on Thursday.

The majority of analysts Kitco News spoke to were mostly bullish on gold next week but still uncertain on whether gold could break out above $1,800.

"Volatility is back and this is what we should be paying attention to. We could see bigger swings in gold. Volatility is bullish for gold and it would deter some risk-on sentiment," said Gainesville Coins precious metals expert Everett Millman.

The Fed popped the optimistic bubble building around the idea of a quick economic recovery in the U.S., which led to a significant selloff in stocks this week.

On Wednesday, the central bank kept interest rates unchanged and signaled no rate hikes through 2022. The Fed reiterated that it is committed "to use its full range of tools" to support the U.S. economy and projected for the U.S. GDP to contract by 6.5% this year.
 

Price levels to watch

Next week, markets could still be busy pricing in their reaction to the Fed's meeting, Millman said. "Investors hang on to what the central bank says … and the Fed's outlook dampens the general confidence. Plus, the economic data is going to be bad. Markets will be searching for direction. This is a tailwind for gold," he noted.

Low inflation pressures, however, are likely to prevent gold from rising too much next week, TD Securities head of global strategy Bart Melek pointed out.

"Gold has increased in volatility quite a bit … and it is close to breaking through," Melek said Friday. "But it might be premature for an outright breakthrough. Looking at low-end around $1,700 and on the high-end at $1,757 … There are issues down the road in the form of weak inflation."

In the long-term, however, Melek is very bullish on gold, stating that once inflation kicks late next year, gold will reach $2,000 an ounce.

Next week, the markets might be entering an in-between period, where investors choose to wait before committing to the market one way or the other, noted SIA Wealth Management chief market strategist Colin Cieszynski.

"I am neutral on gold and looking for a sideways trend between $1,655-$1,765," Cieszynski told Kitco News on Friday. "For the next few weeks, we are probably going to see a lot of neutrality across a lot of markets as we are heading into mid-point of the year. There is a ton of positive and negative news and people are waiting to see how things shake out … Central banks unleashed all this stimulus and there is not going to be anything new coming for awhile. Markets are stabilizing."

Millman is slightly more bullish in the short-term, widening his next week's range to include $1,800 an ounce. "Given the volatility, my range has extended. On the upside, I am looking at $1,800 and downside $1,650," he said.

The next big resistance level for gold is $1,760, said LaSalle Futures Group senior market strategist Charlie Nedoss. "If we challenge that next week, we will be looking at $1,780 as next resistance," Nedoss added.

Second COVID-19 wave

Another major driver next week will be renewed fear of the second COVID-19 wave as some U.S. states are face climbing coronavirus case numbers as they begin to reopen.

"Adding to the concern in markets over the past few days have been signs that the spread of the coronavirus still hasn't been brought under control in parts of the country. Although the number of daily new cases continues to trend gradually lower at a national level, the past couple of weeks have seen a notable spike in cases in a number of states including Florida, Texas, Utah and, most clearly, Arizona, while new cases in California are still climbing steadily," said Capital Economics senior U.S. economist Andrew Hunter.

And even though a second round of state-wide lockdowns is not a significant threat yet, consumers might be put off from going out and shopping noted Hunter.

Key data

The markets will be eyeing the Fed Chair Jerome Powell semi-annual testimony to Congress on Tuesday and Wednesday, in which he is likely to reiterate the Fed's dovish message from this week.

Other critical pieces of macro data will be May's retail sales and May's industrial production in the U.S., which are both scheduled to be released on Tuesday.

"The U.S. focus will be on how high retail sales and industrial production bounce following the ending of lockdowns across many states. Given car sales numbers have rebounded strongly we expect robust retail sales," said ING economists on Friday. "Factory re-starts should also mean robust manufacturing activity, but oil and gas extraction will be a drag on industrial production overall."

Other data sets next week include Monday's NY Empire State Manufacturing Index from June, Tuesday's Bank of Japan interest rate decision, Wednesday's U.S. building permits and housing starts, and Thursday's Bank of England interest rate decision, the U.S. jobless claims, as well as the Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index from June.

 

By Anna Golubova

For Kitco Ne

David

The Potential Looming Catalyst for Silver No One Sees Coming

The Potential Looming Catalyst for Silver No One Sees Coming

There are a number of catalysts that could ignite the silver market over the coming months and years. To Mike and I it seems inevitable that silver will be a direct beneficiary of the monetary madness that defines the world of central banking today. Give us some headline-making inflation, for example, and a roaring bonfire in the silver market will be underway.

But there’s another potential catalyst that is so immense, so market-altering, that it would overwhelm the silver market and profoundly change its structure for a generation or more. Not just something that would send the price soaring, but reshape the supply/demand balance and even change the way people view it.

Big words, I know, especially when most economists don’t view what I’m about to outline a likely possibility. But those are the same people who said in 2005 that real estate wasn’t in a bubble… that in early 2008 the risk of an economic downturn was low… or that as recently as December 2019 the economy was recession proof. And the fact that no one is thinking about this is, in itself, another catalyst, since it would catch the investment world off guard.

Here’s what this looming catalyst for silver could be, along with why I think it’s a distinct possibility and how it could alter the market for years to come…
 

Enter a New Buyer: Governments

Yes, it’s true that central banks don’t hold silver in their reserves today. And yes, silver is not part of the monetary system anywhere in the world. And yes, they currently don’t buy silver and keep very little in inventory.
The possibility I’m raising is that they begin to do some, or all, of those things.

Why would they add silver to their reserves? Or begin to stockpile it again?

There are actually many reasons. Here’s five of them…
 

#1: History

Governments using silver as a monetary asset is NOT NEW. In fact, silver has been actual currency throughout history more often than gold.

Not only that, according to some sources, central authorities—whether defined as central banks or other entities—have held silver for more than 250 generations.

And as good historians know, the US previously used silver as part of its monetary system, as this infographic shows.

Governments have also stockpiled silver in the past. In some pretty big amounts, too, as I’ll show.

There’s other potential ties to governments and silver…

India was a silver country long before it was a gold country.

Mexico is the largest silver producing country in the world, Peru the second, so each have plenty of metal they could tap to sure up their reserves or any other use.

China and Russia are the third and fourth largest producers, respectively, so could use it as another way to diversify out of the US dollar, which they have been keen to do.

Poland is also a large producer with a long history of silver mining.

In today’s world would it really be that surprising to see some countries want to stockpile silver again, whether to sure-up industrial supply or perhaps even some sort of national security purpose? It wouldn’t exactly be a stretch to see China or Russia do that.

There are numerous examples from history of how silver was part of the monetary system… or used in circulating currency… or held in reserves by central authorities… or held in inventory. The idea that governments would buy it is literally an old idea.

#2: A Monetary Crisis Demands It

It is not current central bank policy anywhere in the world—at least that we know of—to hold silver as an official reserve asset.

But a monetary crisis could change that mandate. Perhaps easily, the strongest reason being the result of the fallout from current monetary and/or fiscal policies.

As you know, central banks are creating currency at an obscene pace. And despite not yet seeing any real-world effects of that massive dilution (other than the stock market going higher), I don’t believe in a free lunch. Actions have consequences—if that’s true, then it stands to reason that these extreme monetary interventions will lead to some very significant monetary consequences.

And the greater those consequences, the greater the pressure to find other strategies and ideas to deal with the fallout. A “new” way to solve the crisis.

Silver is a ready alternative to any monetary breakdown.

#3: It’s Already Money

Silver, like gold, has no counterparty risk. It is no one’s liability.
Silver is also internationally recognized, globally accepted, and highly liquid.

is money, so governments don’t have to go looking for something else. Its strong monetary history already offers them a viable, ready-to-go option.

There just aren’t many other assets that could serve as a monetary backstop anyway. Stocks? Real Estate? Some other country’s currency? The IMF’s made-up SDRs that don’t exist except as digits on a computer screen?

None of these are sound forms of money. They have their uses—but not as money. There would be no reason for governments to look elsewhere.

#4: Silver is Cheap

Relative to gold, as every silver bug knows, silver is dirt cheap. It requires more storage space, but that’s not a strong enough reason to avoid it.

Given silver’s low relative price they could buy it as a strategic metal—in other words, buy in certain amounts for one specific purpose.

Its low price has made the market so small (see the 4:15 mark) that even just one country starting to buy would send investors worldwide scrambling to get their hands on some of it.

 

#5: Nothing is Impossible Today

One person I floated this idea to dismissed it as “unrealistic.” But after the pandemic and the protests can you really say that some unexpected event would “never happen?”

Besides, plenty of financial events have occurred at the hands of governments that we previously thought were “unrealistic.” Negative interest rates. Negative oil prices. Stock and bond and real estate bubbles. The Fed buying junk bonds. Trillion dollar deficits. Multi-trillion dollar emergency spending plans.

The environment is ripe for new approaches, too. Citizens and investors aren’t exactly in love with the establishment these days, the election of populist leaders on several continents being one obvious example.

Last, it wouldn’t be surprising to see politicians try to take monetary power away from central bank authorities. That’s actually one tenet of MMT.

As blatant as the intervention has been in economies, interest rates, stocks, bonds, metals, and other assets, 'is it' really that far-fetched to think that in a major monetary crisis governments might not take the unconventional step of turning to silver, as they have in the past?

If governments begin to buy silver in any meaningful amounts, they would become a major source of demand, just as they are with gold now.

Here’s what that could look like…

Government Inventories vs. Monetary Needs

Governments today hold a total of 48.6 million ounces of silver in inventory.

This tiny amount is largely the result of silver being removed from the monetary system by virtually every government in the world. The need to stockpile it thus decreased, so they sold their silver. And sold and sold, to the point where the amount stockpiled today is negligible.

Here is the annual amount of global government silver inventories since 1970.

From 1980 to 2007, governments were relentless sellers. Those 48.6 million ounces today equates to just 6.4% of last year’s global mine output, a little more than what miners produce in three weeks. It is a mere 5% of 2019’s total supply. It’s an inconsequential amount, and is far short to serve any effective monetary purpose.

With such little in their coffers, governments would need to buy a lot to make a material difference, whether for reserves or inventories or some other purpose.

The first compelling thing about this idea is that if governments decided for any of the above reasons to buy silver, they would represent a new source of demand. One that is currently not present. This would occur on top of a supply chain that is already strained and amidst a trajectory for new mine supply that is headed nowhere but down.

The second compelling factor is how much they might buy. Let’s take a look at that from several angles…

First, here’s how many ounces governments would need in order to match the levels they held in 1970, 1975, and 1980.

If they wanted the same amount as 1975, they’d need to buy 205 million ounces. The 1980 level would require over 282 million ounces. And 1970 would entail a purchase of 314 million ounces—which is over 41% of all the metal mined last year.

Sure, they could buy over several years, but there’s another issue…

Those amounts don’t realistically represent what they’d need today. For starters, the world has a lot more people in it. A lot more wealth, too, which, combined with silver’s low price has pushed its percent of global wealth to a much smaller level than it was then. Saying what they held 40 and 50 years ago would be sufficient to meet today’s needs would be akin to asking you to live off your 1980 salary.

So let’s be a little more realistic…

First, let’s look at the global population. It’s grown 110.5% since 1970… 90.9% since 1975… and 75.1% since 1980. Here’s how many ounces governments would need to hold to represent the global citizenry to the same degree it did in those years.

To equal the same percentage of silver for the population as in 1970, governments would need to buy over 755 million ounces. This amount is not available, of course, as it exceeds a full year’s mine supply. Even the amounts for 1975 and 1980 are excessive and unattainable within a short timeframe.

But that’s still not enough to have a meaningful monetary impact…

In 1980 silver represented 0.268% of global wealth. But at the end of 2019 it was a miniscule 0.011%. In other words, governments would have to buy 2,436% more silver than what they held then to represent the same percentage of global wealth today. That would look like this.

Ounces Needed to Match Percent of Global Assets of 1980

Governments would need to buy 8.318 billion ounces of silver.

That is seven times more than all the silver held by ETFs… more than 26 times Comex “delivery” inventories at the end of 2019, and over 7,000% more than what’s held in London.

It’s also more than the number of gold ounces held by global central banks today. Total gold reserves are 34,891.5 tonnes (1.12 billion ounces), roughly an eighth of the amount of silver they’d need if this were a goal.

Again, this is just for silver to equal 0.268% of global wealth. This is a level they’ve held before, so it’s not some hope I’ve dreamed up.

This all obviously begs one big fat question: given how tiny the silver market is, and given that 15-20% is lost each year, and given that mine supply is in a structural decline… where would they get all this silver?

They won’t. It’s not available. But that may not keep them from trying if monetary issues get as bad as Mike thinks they will.

 

Would Governments Really Buy Silver?

To be clear, most analysts and economists think the odds of this are low. Maybe they are.

But the greater the crisis the more likely new strategies will be pursued. If this ends up being one of those strategies, it would have a direct, immediate, and immeasurable effect on this teeny, tiny market.

And by the way, I’m not the only one that considers this a possibility. The crew at Incrementum devoted an entire section to it in their new In Gold We Trust report (starting at page 249).

And here’s an important point: if governments do begin to buy silver again, it won’t just push the price higher, but would elevate silver’s importance around the world for many years. It’s hard to imagine that the persona around silver wouldn’t change.

Incrementum’s report summed it up best: “We do not know what the future holds but we would be surprised if, in retrospect, silver will not have proven to be a wise investment for the next generation.”

I’m with them, and Mike Maloney. Regardless of whether governments buy silver or not, there are glory days ahead for this shiny metal.

 

Jeff Clark, Senior Analyst, GoldSilver.com

David

If gold is gaining why is M&A muted?

If gold is gaining why is M&A muted?

The Fed announcement on Wednesday that interest rates would stay unchanged, as well as signaling no rate hikes through 2022, sent gold higher with Comex gold futures finishing the week $32 higher at $1,737 an ounce.

Kitco's Michael McCrae and Neils Christensen sat with sector specialist Luis Rivera to discuss where gold could be headed next.

Money is flowing into the mining sector, but M&A could be muted by COVID-19 restrictions. Twenty-twenty's deals pale to last year's blockbuster tie-ups, such as the $13B Goldcorp-Newmont deal, and Kirkland Lake-Detour Gold take out at $3.8B. This year, the biggest deal is SSR Mining-Alacer at $2.4B.

Rivera authors High Grade. He is also a great follow on Twitter at EconomicAlpha. Drake

 

Michael McCrae

David

Gold to shed $150 by year-end as fear of runaway prices is premature: Capital Economics

Gold to shed $150 by year-end as fear of runaway prices is premature: Capital Economics

Gold prices are likely to end the year at $1,600 an ounce, which is $150 below the current level of $1,750 an ounce, according to Capital Economics.

The main reason for such a bearish outlook is the argument that fears of runaway inflation are premature in the short and medium term, said Capital Economics commodities economist James O’Rourke.

74% 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.

What this means for gold is weaker safe-haven demand and lower prices by year-end, O’Rourke wrote on Wednesday.

“Despite fears of runaway prices, we think that stimulus-fueled inflation is unlikely in the short or medium term. With interest rates set to remain historically low, we expect the gold price will come under pressure from fading safe-haven demand, falling to $1,600 per ounce by year-end,” he said.

At the time of writing, the August Comex gold futures were trading at $1.751.40, up 1.78% on the day.

Gold prices have been rallying after major sell-off in mid-March along with stocks. The stellar gold-price performance has been led by COVID-19 uncertainty, lower interest rates and expectations of runaway inflation triggered by the massive stimulus injected into the global economy.

“This year’s rally in the gold price has come on the back of a coronavirus-led surge in safe-haven buying and a plunge in interest-rate expectations. More recently, however, we suspect that the uptick in the gold price has come from investors positioning themselves against the risk of inflation, though we don’t expect it to pick up much in the short term.”

Expectations of higher prices has been driving gold most recently, which explains why gold has been rising alongside with stocks in May and beginning of June.

“We think some investors are now positioning themselves against the risk of inflation. This may help explain the strength of the gold price since late March, in the face of a recovery in ‘risky ’assets such as equities,” O’Rourke pointed out.

On top of that, Capital Economics does not see all this new stimulus as too inflationary in the medium term either.

“We expect a period of disinflation in the short term. What’s more, we don’t think that expansionary fiscal and monetary policy will lead to runaway inflation in the medium term,” O’Rourke described. “After all, cutting interest rates to zero and launching quantitative easing after the Global Financial Crisis failed to deliver significant inflation … Japan’s experience suggests that inflation is hard to generate.”

Inflation expectations are only likely to rise marginally from current lows, which is what will put pressure on the yellow metal by year-end, O’Rourke added.

“We expect U.S. interest rates to remain at their lower bound going forward, so the gold price is unlikely to benefit from a further fall in rate expectations anytime soon. And unless the virus takes a turn for the worse, we think safe-haven demand will wane too as the global economy recovers, ultimately weighing on the gold price,” he noted.

 

By Anna Golubova
For Kitco News

David

The Federal Reserve signal’s ZERO is here to stay

The Federal Reserve signal's ZERO is here to stay

Today the Federal Reserve convened this month’s FOMC meeting. The most important statement made by the Fed at the conclusion of this meeting was that the United States Federal Reserve does not plan to raise interest rates until 2022. Interest rates will stand where they currently are; at near zero.

The Fed also reiterated that the Central Bank will continue to buy Treasuries as well as mortgage-backed securities at the current pace. Since mid-March of this year the Federal Reserve has purchased over $2 trillion worth of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities. The central bank has stated that they will buy a minimum of $20 billion worth of treasuries this week, and up to $22.5 billion in mortgage bonds to continue to stimulate the economy.

Chairman Jerome Powell was clear when he stated that the Federal Reserve is committed to using its full range of tools in order to support continued growth in the U.S. economy. They maintain their commitment and policy of promoting maximum employment, and price stability goals, which is in essence benchmarking inflation rate at approximately 2%.

The statement released today by the Federal Reserve said that, “The Committee will continue to monitor the implications of incoming information for the economic outlook, including information related to public health, as well as global developments and muted inflation pressures, and will use its tools and act as appropriate to support the economy. In determining the timing and size of future adjustments to the stance of monetary policy, the Committee will assess realized and expected economic conditions relative to its maximum employment objective and its symmetric 2 percent inflation objective. This assessment will take into account a wide range of information, including measures of labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings on financial and international developments.”

This statement along with the press conference held by Jerome Powell is the first economic updated forecast in the last six months. The Fed released their new economic projections and an updated “dot plot “today, which clearly showed that they plan to leave interest rates where they are.

The net effect of today’s statement and press conference was to take gold prices sharply higher. As of 4 PM EST gold futures basis the most active August contract is currently up $26 at $1747.90. This is a net gain of over 1.5%. The US dollar was weaker by approximately quarter percent. Lastly silver gained over 3% on the day, and after factoring in today’s $0.55 gain is currently at $18.34.

 

 

By Gary Wagner

David