Gold and silver trade higher leading into the European open

Gold and silver trade higher leading into the European open

Gold and silver are trading marginally higher as we lead into the European session this morning. The yellow metal is trading at $1860/oz while silver has moved to reach $27.73/oz. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper trades -0.34% lower after a dismal session on Tuesday and spot WTI is up another 0.27% to trade at levels not seen since October 2018.

After inheriting a weak handover from the U.S. bourses in the Asia Pac area traded mixed overnight. The Nikkei 225 (-0.50%) and Shanghai Composite (-0.91%) both fell while the ASX bucked the trend to move 0.09% higher. European index futures are pointing towards a negative cash open.

In FX markets, there was very little movement overnight once again. NZD/USD was the biggest mover and moved 0.19% higher. In the crypto space, BTC/USD remains above $40k.

Looking at the major headlines from overnight, China said it will release its national reserves of copper, aluminum and zinc. The nation ordered firms to curb their overseas commodities exposure.

The U.S. is considering establishing a permanent naval task force in the Pacific region to counter Chinese strength.

U.K. May CPI +2.1% vs +1.8% y/y expected. Japanese Core Machinery Orders for April +0.6% m/m (expected 2.5%). Japanese trade balance for May -187bn yen (expected Y -77bn).

Now Australia has made a trade deal with the U.K. they are looking to create a free trade deal with the EU according to the Australian trade minister.

The U.S. and EU are said to have agreed on a deal to address the long-term viability of the iron ore and aluminum industries.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include Chinese retail sales, Chinese industrial production, U.S. building permits, Canadian CPI, weekly DoE's, FOMC rate decision and comments from ECB's de Guindos, Elderson and the Fed members following the decision and projections later.
 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

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Inflation is a double-edged sword for gold

Inflation is a double-edged sword for gold

Beginning tomorrow, the Federal Reserve will begin its FOMC meeting for June, which will conclude on Wednesday. Following the conclusion, the Federal Reserve will release a statement, which a press conference will follow by Chairman Jerome Powell. One of the most important topics that market participants will focus upon is the forward action of the Federal Reserve as to whether or not they will begin to taper their massive asset purchases, which have now swelled their balance sheet to well over $7 trillion.

Gold is a primary safe-haven asset that has been used historically as a hedge against inflation. Simply put the buying power of gold has not changed in the last 100 years and has held its value better than any currency on earth.

According to Investopedia, "Inflation is the decline of purchasing power of a given currency over time. A quantitative estimate of the rate at which the decline in purchasing power occurs can be reflected in the increase of an average price level of a basket of selected goods and services in an economy over some period of time."

For example, in $1907, a single troy ounce of gold sold for $20.67. A $20 gold coin was worth $20, the same value as a $20 U.S. bill (a gold certificate redeemable in gold at any bank). That $20 bill or $20 gold piece had incredible buying power back then. It could fund evening in New York including a stay at the Plaza, a new suit, and a steak dinner.

In 1907 the Plaza in New York opened its doors and the cost of a room was $2.50 per night. According to reference.com, "A properly dressed gentleman in 1900 would have spent between $7 and $16 on his suit, $1 on each of his dress shirts, around $7 on his topcoat, and 48 cents for a fine felt hat." A steak dinner at the Plaza would cost approximately $1.50.

In other words, the approximate cost for a night in New York after buying an eight dollars suit, a dress shirt for a dollar, a top-coat for seven dollars, a felt hat for $0.48, a night at the Plaza for two dollars and fifty cents, and a steak dinner for a dollar and a half. Your night on the town in New York would cost $20.48. You could use either the gold coin or gold certificate U.S. 20-dollar bill to cover the majority of the purchase.

In 2021 a $20 U.S. gold coin at today's pricing is worth roughly $1867.20, compared with the U.S. twenty-dollar bill which is worth twenty dollars. It is quite obvious that today's fiat currency probably would not cover the steak dinner let alone any of the other items listed above in 1907. This example clearly illustrates that gold for the most part has held its value in terms of what goods and services you're able to buy 100 years ago. It clearly illustrates that gold historically has been an excellent source of protection against inflation.

But here's the rub; right now, inflation is a double-edged sword that can cut both ways. While it has eloquently maintained its buying power over the last 100 years, the recent rise in inflation following the 2020 Global recession is causing many and analysts and economists to wonder when the Federal Reserve will begin to taper its asset purchases and when they will once again raise interest rates. These actions would be a dramatic change in the current mandate of the Federal Reserve which is letting inflation run hot as an attempt to put more Americans back in the workforce. As such any talk of tapering could have a dramatic effect on real interest rates of U.S. debt which would be a bearish influence on gold. The most recent consumer price index data, which was released yesterday, indicated that the annualized inflation rate is now at 5%. This is the highest level of inflation since the recession following the banking crisis in 2008.

Market participants are already anticipating that possibility with gold futures basis the most active August 2021 Comex contract currently trading down $12 on the day at $1867.60, after hitting an intraday low of $1845.70, which is concurrently where the 200-day moving average is fixed.

Our technical studies indicate that major support for gold prices remains at $1845, which is based upon a combination of the 200-day moving average and the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement at $1844. The studies also indicate that resistance begins at $1900 to $1905, with major resistance at $1920, the highest trading level since this rally began at the end of March 2021 when a double bottom at $1692 was identified.

 

By Gary Wagner

Contributing to kitco.com

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Gold price stuck at a ‘speed bump’ on its path to $2,000 – analysts

Gold price stuck at a 'speed bump' on its path to $2,000 – analysts

Gold failed to hold the $1,900 an ounce level as it wrapped up the week. And prices are said to remain choppy until the $1,950 an ounce level is reached, where the new buyers would come in to take gold to $2,000, according to analysts.

The gold space fell victim to profit-taking Friday as the U.S. dollar and the U.S. Treasury yields climbed higher. "The U.S. dollar is moving up, the U.S. Treasury yields are moving up a little bit. Gold is seeing a knee-jerk correlation trade. That seems to have driven some folks to take profits," TD Securities head of global strategy Bart Melek told Kitco News.

This late-week pullback has caught many industry experts off guard, especially after seeing the annual inflation rate at the highest level since 2008. But analysts still view May's 5% year-on-year inflation as largely transitory.

"The Federal Reserve will not be shaken by inflation. Much of the jump was due to base effects. April and May of last year were the worst COVID-19 months for inflation. So, right now, we are comparing year-on-year levels from that low period," Melek explained.

One critical development to monitor this summer is whether or not inflation will remain somewhat elevated or retreat back to the Fed's target of 2%. "A lot of the base effects should disappear, and the supply issues will improve. But there is still price leakage into production. Meaning energy prices, metal prices, some equipment costs are rising," Melek pointed out. "The question is, will inflation go from 5% to 2% or stay at 4-3%."

The risk here is that the long-term easy monetary policy will embed the higher inflation numbers into the general CPI for longer. "It won't be 5%, but will it be above target for a while," Melek explained. "Fed's current focus is more on full employment part of the mandate rather than strict inflation control."

This is a great environment for gold because somewhat elevated inflation and low interest rates translate into quite negative real rates. "Gold should do well," Melek said.

Gold's trouble at the $1,900 level is more of "a speed bump" rather than "an outright move lower," Melek noted.

There is support around the $1,881 an ounce level. "We still could move a little lower. It will very much depend on what the Fed says on Wednesday. The central bank might start to talk about talking about it tapering. Any real announcement won't happen until September," he said.

Gold bulls are still in the driver's seat from the technical perspective, said FXTM senior research analyst Lukman Otunuga. "The $1,855 [is the] support level with $1,916 acting as the first level of interest if $1,900 proves to be weak resistance. Beyond $1,916, gold has the potential to test $1,927 and the year-to-date high at $1,959," Otunuga wrote.
 

What will Fed say?

All eyes will be on the Federal Reserve meeting next week, with the key interest rate announcement scheduled for Wednesday.

"Fed will remain accommodative going forward even despite hotter than expected inflation numbers. But next week, we'll have a slightly less dovish central bank along with the beginning of taper discussion," said OANDA senior market analyst Edward Moya.

This short-term view also weighed on gold this week, giving investors a reason to sell in the short-term, Moya added. However, the Fed will be one of the last central banks to tighten monetary policy, he said, which should give enough room for gold to try to tackle the $1,950 an ounce level this summer.

"Right now, the gold market is at a rest stop. But deeper into the summer, prices will move," he noted. "Everyone is eyeing $1,950. It will excite the non-gold traders to jump back in. In the end, gold will eventually lead to $1,950, and then at some point, it'll run to $2,000."

Moya sees gold buyers emerge at the $1,870 level but warned that the next few months would be choppy for the precious metal.

The Fed is also expected to start outlining how it will proceed with tapering. It will be based strictly on economic progress — which could happen with the upcoming employment report from June. "This could pave the way for people to start expecting tapering by the end of the year," Moya said.

The Fed will also be updating its economic forecasts during the meeting.

"We will be getting updated forecasts, including the Fed's 'dot plot' chart with markets looking to see if there are any signs of cracks in the Fed's position that elevated inflation readings will be 'transitory,'" said ING chief International economist James Knightley. "With headline inflation at a 13 year high and core inflation at a near 30 year high, we suspect they will be a little more balanced on their assessment."
 

More data

Other key macro data markets are focusing on next week include Tuesday's retail sales, PPI, and industrial production, Wednesday's housing starts and building permits, as well as Thursday's jobless claims and Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index.

"In terms of the data, we will be closely following retail sales and industrial production. The former could print a negative number given the slowdown in auto sales after a strong run. Vehicle prices are surging, and output is lacking, given automaker supply chain issues," Knightley added.
 

By Anna Golubova

For Kitco News

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Gold’s path to $2K: Biggest market risk is ‘invisible wealth destruction’

Gold's path to $2K: Biggest market risk is 'invisible wealth destruction'

Gold's $1,900 an ounce level remains a high hurdle to breach, but analysts still expect more gains for the yellow metal this summer.

With U.S. inflation now running at an annual pace of 5%, the attention is turning to the Federal Reserve meeting next week. The key question is whether the Fed will continue to ignore rising prices or start hinting at tapering.
 

Here's a look at Kitco's top three stories of the week:

1. Economy is 'sitting on a time bomb': Deutsche Bank warns of 'devastating' effects of inflation

2. 70s-style inflation: Biggest risk is 'invisible wealth destruction,' gold price going to $20K this decade

3. Gold price at 'steep discount' vs. crude oil: $2,000 gold will be breached – Bloomberg Intelligence
 

By Anna Golubova

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

David

Gold Price Prediction – Prices Drop to Support as the Dollar Surges

Gold Price Prediction – Prices Drop to Support as the Dollar Surges

Gold prices dropped sharply on Friday as the dollar surged higher. The move in the dollar came despite a further decline in U.S. yields. The 10-year Treasury yield closed at the lowest level in 4-months declining down to 1.45%, after hitting a high of 1.67% early in May. The net worth of U.S. households climbed to new heights as 2021.Technical analysis

Gold prices rebounded from session lows and continue to accelerate higher close in h black. Support is seen near an upward sloping trend line that comes in near 1,872. Short-term resistance is seen near the 10-day moving average at 1,896 .Target resistance is seen near the May highs at 1,916. Short-term momentum continues to whipsaw after turning positive as the fast stochastic generated a crossover buy signal. Medium-term momentum has turned negative as the MACD (moving average convergence divergence) as the MACD (moving average convergence divergence) index generated a crossover sell signal. The MACD histogram is printing in negative territory with a flat trajectory which points to consolidation.

The net worth of U.S. households climbed to new heights as 2021. The gains were mostly in the stock market. The total balance sheet for households and nonprofits rose to $136.9 trillion in the first quarter, a 3.8% gain from the end of 2020. Of that total, $3.2 trillion came from equity holdings, while $1 trillion was due to the continued escalation in real estate values. Household debt totaled $16.9 trillion for the quarter, growing at 6.5% rate that was the fastest pace going back to 2006.

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

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Gold and silver are trading flat leading into the European open

Gold and silver are trading flat leading into the European open

Gold and silver are trading flat leading into the European open. The yellow metal trades at $1887/oz while silver hovers around $27.70/oz. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper (-0.30%) and WTI (-0.30%) are both lower while palladium (0.30%) is the only precious metal to trade higher.

The indices in the Asia Pac area bucked the negative handover from Wall Street. The Nikkei (0.34%), ASX (0.44%) and Shanghai Composite (0.55%) all traded higher overnight. European futures are pointing to a positive open.

In the FX markets, once again there was no real movement overnight. The dollar index trades 0.02% higher and the biggest mover was AUD/USD which pushed 0.14% higher. In the crypto space, BTC/USD has dropped 1.60% after an impressive 12% rally during yesterday's session.

Looking at some of the news from overnight, PBOC Governor Yi Gang says sees China's 2021 consumer inflation below 2%.

In the China vs Australia trade war, Australian PM Morrison says the nation will refer China tariffs to WTO.

U.S. Congressman Yarmuth says a bipartisan infrastructure deal looks unrealistic.

A bipartisan House group unveiled a $1.25trl plan that could avoid corporate and income tax increases.

Commerce ministers of the U.S. and China spoke on the phone, agreed to move forward. The U.S. and China agreed to push forward with investment ties.

Japanese PPI for May printed at +0.7% m/m vs the expected reading of 0.5%.

There have been reports suggesting Japan is considering a major economic stimulus package soon, before 'snap' election in September.

Moderna plans to expand manufacturing capability, aims to supply 3bn doses of its vaccine next year.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include the ECB rate decision, OPEC report, U.S. CPI, U.S. initial jobless claims and comments from ECB's Lagarde, Lane, German Buba's Balz, BoE MPC Member Haldane.
 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

David

Gold is hovering at $1890/oz leading into the European open

Gold is hovering at $1890/oz leading into the European open

Gold is trading flat heading into the European session. The yellow metal is hovering at around $1890/oz and silver has moved -0.12% lower to trade at $27.57/oz. Copper has once again had a tough session falling -0.62% while spot WTI trades 0.43% in the black past $70/bbl.

Indices were mixed overnight as the Shanghai Composite traded 0.16% higher and the Nikkei 225 (-0.35%) and ASX (-0.31%) both lost ground. European index futures are pointing towards a mixed open.

The dollar index is trading marginally lower but all of the major FX pairs have traded within their ranges. In the crypto space, BTC/USD recovered from its lows to trade at $33,800.

Looking at some of the news stories, it was reported that China is considering price controls on coal prices.

Chinese (May) CPI 1.3% y/y (vs. exp 1.6%). PPI saw its highest pace in factory gate prices since 2008 and surged to hit 9.0% vs exp 8.5% prev 6.8%

Germany's April trade balance printed at €15.5 billion vs €16.3 billion expected.

It was also said that U.S. Republican senators said made “a lot of progress” in infrastructure talks.

Sticking with the U.S. administration, US Senate members vote to approve a bill to help the U.S. compete with China.

NZ business survey (preliminary, June): Confidence -0.4% (prior +1.8%) & Activity outlook +29.1% (prior +27.1%).

RBA's Kent says expectations do not point to inflation rising above targets in a sustainable way.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include the BoC rate decision and weekly DoE's.
 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

David

Gold flirts with $1900/oz ahead of the European open

Gold flirts with $1900/oz ahead of the European open

Gold is flat this morning heading into the European open while live is trading marginally lower. After yesterday's 0.47% rise the yellow metal is now flirting with $1900/oz again this morning while silver is yet to break $28/oz. In the rest of the commodities markets copper (-0.45%) and spot WTI (-0.69%) both trade in the red.

After a mixed close in the U.S., it was much of the same in the Asia Pac area. The Nikkei 225 finished flat while the ASX moved 0.15% higher. The Shanghai Composite struggled and dropped -0.69%. Over in the EU, futures are pointing towards a slightly negative open.

In the FX markets, the dollar index trades 0.10% higher and the biggest mover overnight was USD/JPY which moved 0.19% higher and this was closely followed by GBP/USD which fell -018%. In the crypto space, BTC/USD has taken another dive and now trades at $32,812 leaving traders wondering if $30k will be broken at some point.

Looking at the news from overnight, China state media advise Australia to diversify its iron ore exports away from China. The state media agency says PBOC may also inject liquidity.

China is said to be moving ahead and making progress on legislation to counter U.S. sanctions against them.

Australia NAB business confidence for May hit 20 (prior 26) and business conditions printed at 37 (prior 32).

Japan GDP final for Q1 2021 -1.0% q/q (prior +2.8%).

Germany April industrial production -1.0% vs +0.4% m/m expected.

El Salvador confirms USD will continue as legal tender in the country.

US President Biden to discuss crypto’s role in ransomware attacks at G7.

US senator says no plans for a further Republican counteroffer on infrastructure. U.S. Capito was said to be sounding not too optimistic ahead of today's meeting with the President.

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the U.S. says the theory that the COVID-19 virus leaked from a Chinese lab in Wuhan is plausible.

There are reports this morning that the easing of all lockdown restrictions in the U.K. could be delayed by up to two weeks.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include German ZEW, EU GDP, EIA report (oil), U.S. trade balance, Jolts Job openings and comments from BoE's Haldane and BOJ Deputy Governor Amamiya.

 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

David

Gold slips on firm dollar as focus shifts to U.S. inflation data

Gold slips on firm dollar as focus shifts to U.S. inflation data

* Medium to longer term outlook for gold positive- analysts (Recasts, adds comments, updates prices)

June 7 (Reuters) – Gold retreated on Monday as the U.S. dollar firmed slightly, with investors' focus switching to U.S. inflation readings later this week that might give some clue to how long the Federal Reserve will hold off from tapering monetary support.

The dollar index strengthened 0.1%, making gold more expensive for holders of other currencies.

Spot gold was down 0.3% to $1,883.50 per ounce by 0929 GMT. U.S. gold futures eased 0.3% to $1,885.40.

Prices rose more than 1% in the previous session after a weaker-than-expected U.S. monthly jobs report calmed investor fears about the Fed reining in monetary stimulus soon.

While a firmer U.S. dollar and U.S. bond yields are both weighing on prices, gold has very good chances of coming back above $1,900 an ounce because the environment continues to be very constructive for the metal, said Commerzbank analyst Eugen Weinberg.

Longer to medium term, ";we might see more volatility on equity markets which will be increasing the value of gold as a safe haven as inflation protection," Weinberg added.

Bullish fundamentals remain in place and ";only a sharp steepening of the U.S. yield curve is likely to change that," said Jeffrey Halley, OANDA senior market analyst.

Lower interest rates decrease the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold, also considered a hedge against inflation that could follow stimulus measures.

And market attention has switched to the next U.S. consumer price index report, and a European Central Bank policy meeting due on Thursday. The ECB is widely expected to maintain its stimulus measures with tapering a distant prospect.

Silver dipped 0.9% to $27.53 per ounce, palladium was down 0.2% to $2,840.05, while platinum fell 0.2% to $1,159.60. (Reporting by Arundhati Sarkar in Bengaluru; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)

 

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

David

Gold price makes a comeback – Russia ditches U.S. dollar, gold stocks best buy since 1980s

Gold price makes a comeback – Russia ditches U.S. dollar, gold stocks best buy since 1980s

After dropping more than $40, gold is making a comeback following another disappointing jobs report out of the U.S.

Here's a look at Kitco's top three stories of the week:

1. Bitcoin is a substitute for copper, not gold – Goldman's top commodity analyst

Cryptocurrencies are risk-on assets, which is why they are more closely aligned to commodities like copper and oil.

"There is good inflation, and there is bad inflation. Good inflation is when demand pulls it. That's what bitcoin, copper and oil hedge. Gold hedges bad inflation where supply is being curtailed," Goldman said.

2. Russia's wealth fund to ditch all U.S. dollar assets for gold, euros, and yuan this month

The decision means selling $40 billion of U.S. dollar assets. The fund holds Russia's oil revenues with a total value of more than $185 billion.

3. 'Gold stocks best buy since 1980s': Gold price to double, but gold stocks could see 10X gains in next 3 years

The one ratio to monitor is the XAU-gold ratio, Timothy Ord, president and editor of The Ord Oracle, tells Kitco News.

"Gold stocks are a way better buy right now than gold itself … Right now, the XAU-gold ratio is around point-zero-nine, which is cheap compared to historical standards and its previous high of above point-three-five," Ord said.
 

By Anna Golubova

For Kitco News

 

Kinesis Money the cheapest place to buy/sell Gold and Silver with Free secure storage

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