Gold and silver move marginally lower heading into the European open

Gold and silver move marginally lower heading into the European open

Gold and silver are trading marginally lower on the last trading day of the week. The yellow metal sold off before it could make a meaningful test of the $1800/oz area. Silver is still holding on to the psychological $26/oz area.

Risk sentiment was mixed overnight. The Nikkei 225 closed just over half a percent lower while the ASX (0.08%) and Shanghai Composite (0.15%) both moved slightly higher. US sentiment took a hit late in the session after Biden hinted at a capital gains tax rise to as much as 43.4%.

In the FX markets, the dollar index (0.10%) has moved lower once again and trades at 91.18. The biggest mover overnight was AUD/USD which trades around 0.27% higher along with NZD/USD which is a closed second at 0.26%. Copper has had another good session pushing up 0.83% and oil is just under half a percent in the black.

In terms of news, BOJ Gov Kuroda says too early discuss timing, means of exit from ultra-easy policy. This is nothing new really.

On the geopolitical front, China's Global Times tweets UK is lying, violating international law, interfering with China.

On the data front, we had the Japanese preliminary PMIs for April. Manufacturing came in at 53.3 (prior 52.7) & services hit 48.3 (prior 48.3), this morning UK March retail sales printed at +5.4% vs +1.5% m/m expected. Australia PMIs (preliminary, April) manufacturing 59.6 (prior 56.8) & services 58.6 (prior 55.5)

Japan finance minister Aso says discussing support policies for the upcoming State of Emergency due to another rise in coronavirus infections.

Use of Johnson & Johnson vaccine in the US expected to be approved again as soon as this weekend

Bitcoin dipped below 50K overnight and some crypto analysts are attributing the move to the fact that rumours of US tax on cryptocurrencies persistently arise.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include PMI's from the major nations, Russian interest rate decision, U.S. new home sales. We could also get comments from ECB's President Lagarde and German Buba's Wuermeling.

 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

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

 

David

Gold moves slightly lower heading into the European open

Gold moves slightly lower heading into the European open

After another move higher during Wednesday's session gold is heading into today's European session 0.14% lower. Silver (-0.28%) is also slightly down but this pales in comparison to the 2.81% gain yesterday.

After a strong close on Wall Street yesterday the ASX (0.83%) and Nikkei 225 (2.38%) bounced back from some recent weakness. The Shanghai Composite did not move in the same vein as it closed -0.38% lower overnight.

FX markets were pretty dull, the biggest mover was NZD/USD which only moved 0.15% lower. The dollar index starts the session just under flat. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper is 0.39% down and spot WTI has moved 0.13% higher. Lastly, BTC/USD has bounced slightly to trade 1.32% in the black.

In terms of news, China's Global Times says Australia is to face serious consequences for unreasonable provocation against China.

The Canadian court is to adjourn Huawei's Meng Wanzhou extradition hearing to August.

Australian Q1 business confidence moved higher to hit 17 this is compared to the previous number of 14 as the nation moved slowly out of the pandemic.

Swiss watch exports (Y/Y) for March hit 37.2% (prev -0.3%) as the sector recovers from the pandemic.

Tokyo's Governor has asked the Japanese government to declare a state of emergency in the city. This comes after another rise in COVID 19 infections. Elsewhere in the Asian region, India's Coronavirus daily new cases surpassed 300k. India is really struggling to get to grips with the pandemic at the moment.

Joe Biden says 80% of Americans over the age of 65 will have had 1 shot of the vaccine by Thursday.

Italian PM Draghi is to unveil a €221bln programme to rebuild the Italian economy.

There was a magnitude 5.7 earthquake offshore Chile. It is not clear if any mining operations have been affected yet.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlight include the US Presidents Earth Day summit, ECB rate decision, U.S. initial jobless claims, existing home sales and comments from German Buba Vice President Buch and ECB's Lagarde.
 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

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

David

Gold pushes higher ahead of the European market open

Gold pushes higher ahead of the European market open

Gold and silver are once again trading higher leading into the European open. Gold is 0.40% higher at $1785/oz while silver has moved up 1% to reach $26oz again.

After inheriting a negative close from the U.S., bourses in the Asia Pac area have struggled overnight. The Nikkei 225 fell -2.03%, ASX -0.29% and the Shanghai Composite traded flat.

In the FX markets, the majors traded within their ranges. The dollar index is 0.02% in the black and the biggest mover was AUD/USD which dropped 0.11%. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper is up another 0.50% and spot WTI fell 0.23%.

In regards to news, UK CPI for March came in at +0.7% vs +0.8% y/y expected and PPI Input month on month for the same month rose to 1.3% vs 0.6% expected.

Sticking with data, Australia Retail Sales for March beat expectations to hit +1.4% m/m (expected +1.0%).

The Japanese government are set to declare a state of emergency in Tokyo, Osaka, Hyogo due to another rise in COVID-19 cases.

Johnson & Johnson will restart shipments of its vaccine to the European Union after some production issues where resolved.

Chinese President Xi will attend the climate summit on 22nd April after Joe Biden extended an invitation to the Chinese leader.

In Germany, support for the Green party surged according to a recent poll by Forsa. Greens 28% vs Merkel's CDU 21%.

Ukrainian President Zelenskiy is said to be willing to meet Russian President Putin to ease tensions. Putin is also set to give his annual address to the nation today.

Saudi Arabia have reiterated calls for Iran to engage once again in negotiations and avoid any more escalation to not expose the region to more conflict.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include Canadian CPI, Canadian rate decision, weekly DoE's and comments from the BOC and BoE's Bailey.
 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

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

 

David

Gold and silver are mixed leading into the European open

Gold and silver are mixed leading into the European open

Gold is trading marginally lower heading into the European open and this comes after a 0.32% fall in yesterday's session. Silver performing slightly better trading 0.30% higher but this also comes after a drop on Monday's session.

After inheriting a negative close from Wall Street bourses in the Asia Pac area are pretty mixed. The ASX (-0.68%) and Nikkei 225 (-1.97%) took a tumble but India's Nifty (0.25%) and South Korea's Kospi (0.68%) both performed well while the Shanghai Composite traded flat.

In the FX markets, the dollar index fell 0.11% and the biggest mover was AUD/USD which rose 0.67%. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper moved another 1% higher and spot WTI also moved 0.86% in the same direction.

In terms of news stories, UK March jobless claims change came in at 10.1k vs 86.6k prior. The unemployment rate (Feb) also fell to 4.9% vs the analyst consensus of 5.1%. There was also German PPI data this morning and it continued to rise to reach 0.9% m/m for Match (exp 0.6% prior 0.7%).

Following the Fed's rhetoric, the RBA April monetary policy meeting minutes noted that unemployment too high. The RBA also said they would "reasonably" do what they can to support the Australian economy.

The PBOC sets China's 1-year loan prime rate at 3.85%, 5-year at 4.65%. Both are unchanged and this was expected.

Sticking with China, Premier Li also warn other countries against meddling in other nations affairs.

There was UK media report that "Russia 'planning large-scale warship assault on Ukraine water supplies'". US expresses deep concerns re Russia's plans to block parts of the Black Sea, seems the situation is escalating pretty quickly.

White House issues a statement saying infrastructure talks were fruitful. This comes after some reports yesterday that the U.S. administration where set to talk about how to section off parts of the bill.

In Australia, Rio Tino said their iron ore shipments increased but they also noted that production moved slightly lower. Brazil's Vale reported iron ore output of 68.0 tons vs expectations of 72 tons.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include NZ CPI and GDT. We could also hear from German Buba Vice President Buch and ECB's de Cos.
 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

 

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

 

David

Gold and silver prices spike, but can rally last? Jim Wyckoff on the long-awaited bull market

Gold and silver prices spike, but can rally last? Jim Wyckoff on the long-awaited bull market

Momentum has shifted back in gold and silver’s favor for now, said Jim Wyckoff, senior market analyst at Kitco News.

“When we last talked, the markets, both gold and silver, were in a near-term price downtrend. Remember, we talked about key support levels that had to hold to keep prices from accelerating to the downside and those key price support levels, technical levels, did indeed hold,” Wyckoff told David Lin, anchor for Kitco News.

On silver, Wyckoff said that the silver market has simply been following gold’s price.

Wyckoff added that this rebound is likely to continue in the short-term.

“The charts suggest that they will [continue moving upward] on a near-term basis. Right now, with the upside breakouts we’ve seen on the daily charts, now the price action we’ve seen in silver, the path of least resistance is sideways to higher,” he said.

 

By David Lin

For Kitco News

 

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Gold and silver are flat leading into the EU open

Gold and silver are flat leading into the EU open

Gold and silver are both trading flat leading into the EU open this morning. Gold had a pretty impressive session yesterday rising 1.58% and pushing past the previous wave high on the daily chart. Silver also did pretty well and moved back into the middle of the long term consolidation area between $21.66/oz and $30.09oz to trade at $25.77/oz.

After inheriting a positive risk tone from the U.S. bourses in the Asia Pac area traded well overnight. The ASX (0.07%), Nikkei 225 (0.14%) and Shanghai Composite (0.77%) all traded higher.

In FX markets, GBP/USD was the biggest mover overnight and moved 0.30% in the red. Elsewhere after some mild USD strength, the dollar index trades 0.07% higher. In the rest of the commodities complex, spot WTI trades 0.57% higher while copper lost 0.73% of its value overnight.

In terms of news stories, there was lots of Chinese data overnight. GDP for Q1 2021 came in at +0.6% q/q (expected +1.4%) and the March industrial production also missed expectations to print at +14.1% y/y (expected +18%). The Chinese unemployment rate moved lower to 5.3% from the last reading of 5.5%. The good news came from the retails sales data which rose to 32.5% vs the analyst consensus of 28%.

More from China as the nations US Treasury holdings hit US$1.104tln, highest since the middle of 2019.

Turkey has banned the use of cryptocurrencies to purchase goods and services. The price action in Bitcoin reflected the news as BTC/USD fell 2.76% leading into the EU open.

We also heard from some central bank members. Fed’s Daly is concerned about the frequency of Federal Reserve market interventions. While Fed's Mester noted the economy has a long way to go until sustainable recovery. Mester also stated that she is not concerned about inflation getting too high.

The White House's infrastructure bill could be passed in small bills and congress will work out the path moving forward (according to U.S. press).

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include EU CPI data, U.S. building permits data, Michigan data and comments from BoE's Woods and Cunliffe.

 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News
 

Kinesis Money Sytem – Manages your Gold and Silver – Find out More

David

Gold, silver set back as chart-based sellers step in

Gold, silver set back as chart-based sellers step in

Gold and silver prices are lower in midday U.S. trading Monday, as the shorter-term futures traders are again pressing the short side of the markets to start the trading week, amid a lack of fresh, markets-moving fundamental news. June gold futures were last down $13.40 at $1,731.60 and May Comex silver was last down $0.505 at $24.82 an ounce.

Global stock markets were mostly lower overnight. U.S. stock indexes are pointed slightly weaker at midday, on a routine corrective pullback from recent gains that put the indexes at record highs last week.

Markets did not paying much attention to Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell's comments on the "60 Minutes" TV show Sunday evening, in which has reiterated the U.S. central bank will continue to support the economy until its fully recovered from the pandemic. He said it will "be a while" before the Fed raises interest rates.

Middle East tensions have up-ticked early this week on reports that a major uranium-enrichment facility in Iran was hit by a damaging cyberattack, likely coming from Israel. Major damage was reported. Still, markets showed no significant reaction.

In another sign of rising and possibly problematic price inflation from the world's major economies, reports say China is considering implementing price controls due to rising commodity prices. Reports also say China's central bank wants to tighten lending standards. Speaking of inflation, the U.S. consumer price index report for March is due out Tuesday morning, and will be extra closely scrutinized following last Friday's hotter-than-expected producer price index report.

The key outside markets today see the U.S. dollar index slightly down. Nymex crude oil prices are firmer and trading around $59.65 a barrel. Meantime, the yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note is presently fetching around 1.65%.

There was no major U.S. economic released Monday.

Technically, June gold futures prices are so far seeing a routine downside correction from recent gains after prices late last week hit a five-week high. However, the bulls need to step up and show power soon to keep the technical ground they have gained recently. The gold bears still have the overall near-term technical advantage. Bulls' next upside price objective is to produce a close above solid resistance at $1,800.00. Bears' next near-term downside price objective is pushing futures prices below solid technical support at $1,700.00. First resistance is seen at today's high of $1,746.20 and then at $1,750.00. First support is seen at$1,725.00 and then at last week's low of $1,721.60. Wyckoff's Market Rating: 3.0

p>May silver futures prices are also seeing a corrective pullback from recent gains. The silver bears have the overall near-term technical advantage. Prices are still in a 10-week-old downtrend on the daily bar chart. Silver bulls' next upside price objective is closing prices above solid technical resistance at $26.00 an ounce. The next downside price objective for the bears is closing prices below solid support at the March low of $23.74. First resistance is seen at $25.00 and then at today's high of $25.33. Next support is seen at $24.50 and then at $24.00. Wyckoff's Market Rating: 3.5.

May N.Y. copper closed down 320 points at 400.80 cents today. Prices closed nearer the session low today. The copper bulls have the overall near-term technical advantage. However, prices have been trending mildly lower for six weeks. Copper bulls' next upside price objective is pushing and closing prices above solid technical resistance at 420.00 cents. The next downside price objective for the bears is closing prices below solid technical support at the March low of 384.90 cents. First resistance is seen at today's high of 405.90 cents and then at 410.00 cents. First support is seen at today's low of 398.80 cents and then at 395.00 cents. Wyckoff's Market Rating: 6.5.
 

By Jim Wyckoff

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money Sytem – Manages your Gold and Silver – Find out More

David

This could push gold price to $1,800 this week

This could push gold price to $1,800 this week

Gold has a chance to break above its key resistance level of $1,750 an ounce this week. Here's what investors need to watch, according to analysts.

The yellow metal had a very decent start to the second quarter, with prices up around 1% on the week. June Comex gold futures last traded at $1,746 an ounce. Earlier in the week, the precious metal was up almost $50 since last Friday as it traded close to the $1,760 an ounce level.

After being bombarded with the Federal Reserve news coverage this week, markets seem to understand that the Fed will be waiting until next year to be proven wrong on its transitory inflation stance, OANDA senior market analyst Edward Moya told Kitco News. And this shift in sentiment could cap the rapid rise in the 10-year U.S. Treasury yields.

"What was different this week was that the Fed seems convinced that we will have to wait until next year to be proven wrong on inflation. Prior to this, markets were trying to hedge as far as this inflation risk. Now, this will get pushed much further down the road," Moya said.

The change in sentiment could be supportive for gold going forward, especially ahead of the U.S. inflation data on Tuesday, which could also surge after a surprisingly strong PPI data on Friday.

"U.S. PPI jumped 1% month-on-month to leave the annual headline rate at 4.2% – the highest since September 2011. This was well ahead of the consensus forecast of 0.5%," said ING chief international economist James Knightley. "This will add to the upside risks for CPI."

A stronger-than-expected CPI number could trigger another rally in yields. But if gold can hold around the $1,750 level, then there is potential for the yellow metal to recover to $1,800 an ounce, analysts told Kitco News.

"If we do get hotter inflation readings next week, it could be a catalyst for higher Treasury yields, which would be bad for gold. But once we pass that event and if gold is still near $1,750, that would be a green light for prices to rise higher. There could be more upside potential for gold after the CPI data," Moya said.

The good news for gold is that it might have already hit its lows during the first quarter of 2021.

"Looks like the bottom appears to be in place for gold. The Fed removed the big risk as far as yields surging. We are going to see an environment where gold could continue to rise," Moya said. "And even though we might not see the August record highs, gold could make a move towards $2,000 again."

It is still too early to decide how the economic recovery will evolve, Moya said. "There are still too many risks in place. Plus, once the economic recovery picks up in the rest of the world, we'll see significant dollar weakness."

The technical outlook is showing a double-bottom in gold, said Walsh Trading co-director Sean Lusk. "The low from March 31 and March 8 form a classic double bottom. The $1,759 level is providing a bit of resistance. If gold breaks it, the precious metal can go to $1,800," he said.

Other supportive drivers for gold are stronger physical demand and renewed central bank gold buying, strategists at TD Securities said.

"Strong Chinese and Indian demand along with renewed interest from central banks have all delivered sufficient support for the yellow metal to hold onto its pandemic-era uptrend," the strategist said. "The breadth of central banks purchasing gold could potentially rise substantially considering the massive increase in sovereign debt and the rapid pace of money supply growth in reserve currency countries. A sustained rise in official interest could provide further support for the yellow metal."

However, new record highs are unlikely for gold until safe-haven demand continues to go towards cryptos, Moya noted. "There has been some diversification away from gold. Crypto madness didn't blow up yet. If the crypto bubble pops, it is a game-changer for gold. But that is difficult to gauge. The $2,250 level could be realistic for gold if we were to see the crypto bubble burst," he said.

Blue Line Futures chief market strategist Phillip Streible was more bearish, noting that gold cannot do well in the current environment defined by fast-paced growth.

"Gold only does well when you have rising inflation and slower growth. We are not in that environment," Streible said. "If gold falls below $1,700 an ounce, we are buyers at $1,680," he said.

The only wildcard that could push gold higher right now is a flare-up in geopolitical tensions, according to Streible.
 

Data to watch

Tuesday's CPI number is forecasted to jump to 2.5% year-on-year in March. Over the summer, ING projects inflation to get close to 4% in light of a stimulus-fuelled economy.

"Inflation could stay closer to 3% for much of the next couple of years and in an environment of strong growth and rapid job creation it adds to our sense that risks are increasingly skewed towards a late 2022 rate hike rather than 2024 as the Fed currently favors," Knightley said.

Other data to watch next week include U.S. jobless claims, retail sales, NY Empire State manufacturing index, Philadelphia Fed manufacturing index, and industrial production, all scheduled to be released on Thursday.

Also, markets will be paying close attention to Friday's building permits and housing starts.

 

By Anna Golubova

For Kitco News

Kinesis Money Sytem – Manages your Gold and Silver – Find out More

David

Gold price kicks off Q2 with gains, but can it break out?

Gold price kicks off Q2 with gains, but can it break out?

The second quarter is already looking better for gold. The precious metal was up almost $50 dollars during the first week of April as it moved past its key resistance level of $1,750. But what happens next is critical — can gold finally hold above this level as analysts cite strength in the metal's latest move higher?

 

Kinesis Money Sytem – Manages your Gold and Silver – Find out More

David

Gold futures retrace much of this week’s gains

Gold futures retrace much of this week’s gains

Gold futures basis the most active June 2021 Comex contract is currently fixed at $1744.10, after closing yesterday at$1756.50, the highest price since February 26. Gold futures basis the most active June 2021 Comex contract lost $14.10 in trading today.

Dollar strength was a minor component in today’s price decline. Today the dollar index gained 0.111 points or 0.12%. The vast majority of today’s decline was attributed to market participants bidding the precious yellow metal lower. Interestingly this was the exact opposite of yesterday’s price gains with the majority of gains due to market participants actively buying that dip and dollar weakness contributing only a fractional component of yesterday’s $14.90 gain.

Silver basis the most active May 2021 Comex contract lost $0.26 today after gaining $0.28 on Thursday. Currently silver futures are fixed at $25.325.

Bitcoin futures which are traded on the Chicago Mercantile continued in their price ascent, gaining $520 today and is currently fixed at $58,675 per coin.

While yesterday’s gains in the precious metals and U.S. equities were a direct result of the minutes released from last month’s FOMC meeting, the minutes underscored the current mandate of the Federal Reserve which has not changed since interest rates were dropped to between 0 and ¼%. Additionally, they continue to add $120 billion per month to their asset balance sheets through purchasing United States bonds and mortgage-backed securities.

The Federal Reserve continues to be aligned with the majority of central banks worldwide, with both the world bank and the Federal Reserve continuing to have an extremely accommodative monetary policy. In fact, on Tuesday the IMF backed the Fed’s decision to be patient and continue to keep interest rates extremely low with the intent of maintaining the current interest rate for years to come.

The International Monetary Fund through the central banks of its member nations continues to its intent to maintain an extremely accommodative monetary policy. In their latest global financial stability report they sent a strong message that there continues to be a need for the current dovish demeanor of central banks worldwide. Both entities are acutely aware that we live in a global economic world in which positive movement in any major country has a spillover effect to other countries and that raising rates too quickly could easily stifle the economic rebound witnessed in the United States and to a lesser extent in Europe.

Chairman Jerome Powell’s statement continues to propose that any rise in inflation is transitory and will be short-lived.

In disagreement, William Watts wrote an article in MarketWatch yesterday. The author spoke about his deep concern that there is the biggest inflation scare in 40 years which will become apparent extremely soon.

“It’s unclear whether inflation will see a lasting comeback, but a booming, stimulus-fed economy rebounding from the COVID-19 pandemic seems all but certain to send some near-term inflationary shock waves through financial markets in coming months.” He cites Christopher Wood, global head of equity strategies at Jeffrey’s in a note written on April 4 that states “there has been a sudden surge in demand following a supply shock which is a classic recipe for a pickup in inflation.”

Of course, if inflation does begin to ratchet up higher it will have an extremely bullish impact on gold and silver because it will devalue the U.S. dollar which has an inverse relationship between the price of those two precious metals. He also warned that investors should be paired for the biggest inflation scare in America on the reopening of the economy since the early 1980s when former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker crushed double-digit inflation by the late 1970s.

Which leads to the question he ponders, which is just how long-lasting will inflationary bout continue? And how the Federal Reserve will respond should that occur? Higher inflation will lead to higher gold and silver prices and have tremendous bearish implications for U.S. equities.

The Fed has also agreed that they will let inflation run hot in lieu of their primary mandate (which is maximum employment) above its former target of 2%. Also, members of the Federal Reserve have stated that they will let inflation run hot for an unspecified amount of time.

Unquestionably upticks in inflation will take gold and silver higher so the question becomes which hypothesis is correct? The analysts or the chairman of the Federal Reserve?

 

By Gary Wagner

Contributing to kitco.com

 

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