Gold and silver both poised to resume uptrend after last week’s correction – Saxo’s Larsson

Gold and silver both poised to resume uptrend after last week’s correction – Saxo’s Larsson

Precious metals saw a sharp bearish correction last week, but prices are rebounding this week with silver leading the pack, according to Kim Cramer Larsson, Technical Analyst at Saxo Bank.

“Gold (XAUUSD) seems to be bouncing from the cloud (shaded area—the Ichimoku Cloud) between the 0.618 and the 0.786 retracement, and the minor support at around 2,326,” Larsson wrote. “A dip down to the 0.786 retracement at 2,314 could still occur before rebounding.

Larsson said that if the gold price breaks above $2,385 per ounce, the prior uptrend is likely back on track with potential to target $2,500. “The 55-day moving average will add to the bullish support,” he said, whereas “A close below 2,277 confirms a downtrend.”

He added that the RSI is indicating a divergence, which suggests that the uptrend could be in exhaustion mode. “However, a close back above the 60 threshold and above the upper falling trendline would be a strong indication of another bullish push in gold,” he said.

Turning to silver, Larsson noted that spot silver (XAGUSD) has bounced from the 0.382 Fibonacci retracement at $30 per ounce, and he believes the gray metal is likely to resume its uptrend.

“Daily RSI is still showing positive sentiment with no divergence, indicating silver could push to levels above 32.52,” he wrote.

Looking at the weekly chart, Larsson said that “If it takes out 32.52, there is no strong resistance until around 34.40–35.40.”

“A break below 30 could continue the correction down to the 0.618 retracement at 28.50,” he concluded.

Gold prices are continuing to hold their earlier gains, with spot gold last trading at $2,351.37 per ounce for a gain of 0.74% on the session.


 

Silver, meanwhile, continues to lead the metals complex on Monday, with spot silver last trading at $31.522 per ounce, up nearly 4 full percentage points on the daily chart.

Kitco Media

Ernest Hoffman

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David

A higher for longer monetary policy is spooking gold; prices see the biggest drop in eight months

A higher for longer monetary policy is spooking gold; prices see the biggest drop in eight months

A higher for longer monetary policy is spooking gold; prices see the biggest drop in eight months teaser image

While central bank purchases and robust Asian demand have created a long-term uptrend in gold, uncertainty surrounding the Federal Reserve's monetary policy continues to generate significant short-term volatility.

At the start of the week, gold prices rallied to a record high above $2,450 an ounce as markets started to solidify expectations that the Federal Reserve was on track to cut rates two times this year.

However, the new breakout rally proved short-lived as gold prepares to end the week more than $100 lower. June gold futures last traded at $2,334.90 an ounce, down nearly 5% from its record highs; prices are down 3.4% from last Friday, its worst selloff in eight months.

The Federal Reserve's minutes from the April/May Federal Open Market Committee meeting show a hawkish sentiment, with the central bank reluctant to cut interest rates as inflation pressures remain elevated.

"Participants noted disappointing readings on inflation over the first quarter and indicators pointing to strong economic momentum and assessed that it would take longer than previously anticipated for them to gain greater confidence that inflation was moving sustainably toward 2 percent," the minutes said.

The minutes also noted that some committee members are willing to raise interest rates if inflation continues to creep higher.

"This revelation pushed back rate cut expectations, with November replacing September as the likely timing for the first cut," said Ricardo Evangelista, Senior Analyst at ActivTrades. "This shift drove an increase in Treasury yields and a stronger dollar, punishing the price of the non-yielding precious metal."

Lukman Otunuga, Manager Of Market Analysis at FXTM, said that gold's selloff ahead of the U.S. Memorial Day long weekend could create more downside pressure for the yellow metal in the near term.

"With traders now only pricing one Fed rate cut in 2024, the scales of power could be shifting in favor of bears," he said.

Otunuga added that in the current environment, the gold market will be sensitive to next week's inflation data. The core Personal Consumption Expenditures Index (PCE), the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge, will be released on Friday.

"Signs of cooling price pressures have the potential to rekindle Fed cut hopes, boosting gold prices. If the PCE report prints above market forecasts, this may deal another blow to Fed cut expectations – dimming gold prices even further," he said. "Talking technicals, the downside momentum could take prices toward the $2300 support level and lower. For bulls to jump back into the game, a move back above $2385 may be required."

Despite the broader bullish sentiment in the marketplace, some analysts note that near-term momentum is turning for gold .

"It certainly wouldn't be much of a stretch to see [gold] retest $2,300. This level, and the area just below, acted as support earlier this month, and it feels as if it wouldn't take much selling to push it back down there. But as ever, strong rallies can appear out of nowhere, particularly after significant pullbacks," said David Morrison, Senior Market Analyst at Trade Nation, in a note Friday.

Alex Kuptsikevich, Senior Market Analyst at FxPro, said he also sees signs of shifting near-term momentum in the marketplace; however, he added that the precious metal could be bought on dips.

"There is a divergence between the RSI and the price dynamics on daily timeframes, where a higher local price high corresponds to a lower peak in the Relative Strength Index. This is seen as a depletion of buying strength and often precedes a major decline or reversal," he said. "However, the latest decline may be a short-term correction, effectively letting off steam and clearing the way to the upside. Still, gold is above its 50 and 200-day moving averages."

Looking at gold's technical picture, analysts have said that investors and traders need to watch initial support between $2,300 and $2,285 an ounce.

In a recent interview with Kitco News, Nitesh Shah, Director of Research at WisdomTree, said that he expects official sector demand to support higher prices.

Shah explained that while central banks aren't focused on gold's price as they look to diversify their reserves, they will still be opportunistic and buy at a discount when they can.

"I suspect, every price dip we see, central banks will be buying. They know that if they want a cheaper price, they had better load up now because the price is only going higher," he said.

With central bank demand providing solid support in the marketplace, Shah said it is only a matter of time before Western Investors jump in.

While Friday's inflation numbers will be the main focus in the shorted trading week, economists will pay close attention to updated GDP numbers and consumer confidence data.

Economic data to watch next week:

 

Tuesday: US Conference Board Consumer Confidence,

Thursday: Preliminary U.S. Q1 GDP, weekly jobless claims, pending home sales

Friday: US PCE and personal income and spending

Kitco Media

Neils Christensen

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David

Wall Street sees gold price declines or consolidation next week, Main Street is more optimistic about gains

Wall Street sees gold price declines or consolidation next week, Main Street is more optimistic about gains


 

Kitco NEWS has a diverse team of journalists reporting on the economy, stock markets, commodities, cryptocurrencies, mining and metals with accuracy and objectivity. Our goal is to help people make informed market decisions through in-depth reporting, daily market roundups, interviews with prominent industry figures, comprehensive coverage (often exclusive) of important industry events and analyses of market-affecting developments.

Wall Street sees gold price declines or consolidation next week, Main Street is more optimistic about gains teaser image

This past week was thin on economic data, so gold prices began the week coasting along at their newly elevated levels coming out of last week's fresh all-time highs.

After opening the week on Sunday evening trading at $2,421.20 per ounce, spot gold stayed comfortably above the 2400 level until shortly after 10:00 am EDT Wednesday morning, when it broke decisively through support and began its steady descent. The release of the minutes from the April/May FOMC meeting later Wednesday afternoon did the yellow medal no favors, as markets digested the news that some voting members were open to hiking rates further if warranted.

Spot gold hit its weekly low of $2,325.46 shortly after 8:30 p.m. EDT Thursday, and as of Friday afternoon, it was trading less than $10 off that level for a loss of over 3.30% on the weekly chart.

The latest Kitco News Weekly Gold Survey has over three-quarters of industry experts believing gold prices have plateaued or will decline in the near term, while half of retail traders still believe the precious metal could climb higher in the coming days.

“Down,” said Darin Newsom, Senior Market Analyst at Barchart.com. “June Gold has more room to the downside to finish its 3-wave downtrend next week. This means the contract would be expected to take out Friday’s low (so far) of $2,326.30. Daily stochastics (a short-term momentum study) are above the oversold level of 20%, also indicating the contract has time and space to move lower.”

“I am neutral on Gold for the coming week,” said Colin Cieszynski, Chief Market Strategist at SIA Wealth Management. “Between the US holiday and the lack of major events heading into month end, it think it may be a quiet week.”

James Stanley, senior market strategist at Forex.com, believes this week’s price decline was more bump-in-the-road than roadblock.

“This week was a strong pullback but there remains quite a bit of support structure around the $2,300 area in both spot and futures,” Stanley said. “If bears can chew through that next week, there could be scope for a larger reversal, but given how the move priced in after a fresh high on Sunday night, this week seems more like a pullback in a bullish trend, at this point.”

“Up,” said Adrian Day, President of Adrian Day Asset Management. “We would expect a recovery rally from the big sell-off the last couple of days, and another attempt to break $2,400 convincingly. Whether gold will break above that level is not certain, but for next week, we expect a good rally.”

“Gold’s resilience to any pullbacks the last three months has been astonishing,” Day added.

Daniel Pavilonis, Senior Commodities Broker at RJO Futures, was looking at the factors weighing on the precious metal Friday. “I think a couple of things are pushing gold down,” he said.

First off, Pavilonis said, a pullback was to be expected after the precious metal made such a strong move higher last week.

“And I think this is just a near-term correction in rates to the upside,” he added, “ten-year yields moving back up to four and a half now, 4.46%. The high today was 4.499. We, we made a move from 4.3 up to around 4.5%, and I think that's really putting some pressure on the metals.”

That said, Pavilonis believes the pullback will be short-lived. “We may go a little bit higher than 4.5%, but I think it's also given an opportunity to buy metals,” he said. “And maybe not so much gold but some of the other metals that haven't caught up with gold, for instance silver. It started to make a move up to $32, $33 [per ounce]. We come back down to $30, if we can stabilize over there, I think we get another run up to $36, $38, somewhere around there.”

Pavilonis said gold might be a different story, however. “I think it'll grind higher up towards $3,000,” he said. “I don't think it's going to be as easy, but if the rate cuts are still in the mix, I think there is a high probability that we continue to move higher.”

“I think you're still going to see a lot of central banks buying, a lot of movement away from the dollar away from U.S. treasuries and into precious metals,” he added. “But in the near term, I think it's had a nice run-up and I'm looking for a little bit of a pullback here.”

“I still believe it’s got some downside, and I think it's appropriate, even on the longer-term move to the upside,” he concluded. “I would say until maybe the tail end of the first week of June, it starts to bottom out, and then maybe the beginning of the second week we can start buying again.”

This week, 14 Wall Street analysts participated in the Kitco News Gold Survey, and sentiment on the precious metal has largely soured for the near term. Only three experts, representing 21%, expected to see gold prices climb higher next week, while eight analysts, fully 57%, predicted a price decline. Another three experts, representing 21% of the total, see gold trending sideways during the coming week.

Meanwhile, 195 votes were cast in Kitco’s online poll, with Main Street investors decidedly sunnier in their outlook for the yellow metal. 94 retail traders, or 48%, looked for gold prices to rise next week. Another 50, or 26%, predicted they would be lower, while 51 respondents, representing the remaining 21%, expect prices to remain rangebound during the week ahead.

Next week will be another slow one for economic news releases, with U.S. markets also closed on Monday for the Memorial Day long weekend. Highlights will include the U.S. Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence report on Tuesday, the release of preliminary U.S. Q1 GDP, weekly jobless claims, and pending home sales on Thursday, and Friday’s U.S. PCE and personal income and spending report.

“Best guess is more of a pullback after the holiday, but holding long positions,” said Mark Leibovit, publisher of the VR Metals/Resource Letter.

Marc Chandler, managing director at Bannockburn Global Forex, also sees further downside risks for gold in the near term.

“Gold set a new record high to start the week, reaching $2450, perhaps in reaction to the crash that took the life of the Iranian president,” he said. “However, a stronger dollar and higher rates saw gold sell off hard and reach nearly $2325.”

“The new highs in the spot market were not confirmed by the momentum indicators, which are still headed lower,” Chandler observed. “We note some reports suggesting China’s demand has slackened. The week ahead sees lighter data, and this could facilitate some consolidation. The US two-year yield extended its recovery from 4.70% recently to nearly 5%. The light calendar suggests that the 5% area may hold.”

“A bounce in gold may be challenged initially in front to $2375,” he said. “Support is seen in the $2275-$2300 area.”

Michael Moor, Founder of Moor Analytics, was looking at both the short- and longer-term technical picture for gold on Friday.

“Technically speaking, we are likely in a higher-timeframe bearish correction against the move up from $1,876.60,” he said. “The trade below $2,434.30 got this bearish, and we've seen 108 points from that, and then the trade below $2,421.60 also projected this downward $60 an ounce-plus, and we've seen 95.3 of that. On 5/22, we got the minor bearish reversal above, and then yesterday left another bearish reversal above.”


 

“We are currently holding exhaustion, final exhaustion is at $2,330 to $2,321.40,” Moor said. “Now, if we take that out and settle below there, then this is going to head down to $2,285.20 and it will confirm that we're in a larger correction as well. Then those next levels of possible exhaustion are going to be down at $2,239.60, to $2,235, and then lower.”

“Right now, I think that we're in a lower-timeframe bearish correction, and likely in a higher-timeframe bearish correction,” he explained. “So what does that mean? The lower-timeframe bearish correction means we're correcting against the most recent move up from $2,285.20. The higher-timeframe correction means we're also likely correcting against the move up from $1,876.60.”

“I think we're in both at the same time,” he said. “It's just that we could always run up and make another higher high and then correct from there. But right now, it looks like we're in a bearish direction in both time frames. And if we're in the higher-timeframe bearish correction, the ideal time for one of these lower exhaustion levels to hold is not until after the 21st of June. So we may see this coming off and consolidating and chopping around with big swings until that point.”

“If it's a new bear trend, it's a bear trend and it's going to blow through all of them,” he added. “But if it's going to hold one of them and start a new bullish structure, the likely timeframe for one of these exhaustion levels to hold more than temporarily is probably not until after the 21st of June.”

And Kitco Senior Analyst Jim Wyckoff sees gold prices declining further next week. “Steady-lower as serious near-term chart damage inflicted this week, including bearish double-top reversal on daily chart,” he said.

Kitco Media

Ernest Hoffman

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David

Gold still on track to hit $3,000 as U.S. debt burden grows – Maison Placements Canada’s John Ing

Gold still on track to hit $3,000 as U.S. debt burden grows – Maison Placements Canada’s John Ing

Gold still on track to hit $3,000 as U.S. debt burden grows – Maison Placements Canada’s John Ing teaser image

After hitting record highs above $2,450, the gold market is again struggling as hawkish sentiment from the Federal Reserve spooks markets; however, according to one market analyst, gold’s rally is far from over.

In his latest gold commentary, John Ing, President and Chief Executive Officer of Maison Placements Canada Inc., reaffirmed his price target, expecting the precious metal to rise to $3,000 an ounce within the next 18 months.

Although the Federal Reserve’s aggressive monetary policy has increased gold’s opportunity costs as a non-yielding asset, Ing said that the government’s burgeoning debt is overshadowing current monetary policy.
 

“More than anything, gold’s push through $2,400/oz was due to rising U.S. debt, which caused money to flow into gold for defensive purposes,” he said in the report published last week. “Since March, gold has been up $500 an ounce, setting numerous all-time highs as the monetization of debt became an instrument of public policy. Americans can carry a lot of debt, but as the burden grows, the sustainability of their monetary and fiscal policies leaves little margin for error.”

Ing Warned investors that rising protectionist sentiment, led by the U.S., could exacerbate growing debt concerns, making the U.S. dollar “the weak link” in global financial markets, which would benefit gold.

“Gold is universally fungible and finite. Gold can be bought and sold in US dollars and thus is an alternative to fiat money for both central banks and investors, particularly since gold is also outside the Western-based system,” Ing said. “The Saudis are selling oil for yuan, and China has grown to be their biggest consumer. This signals a fundamental shift in power from the West to the East, with the petroyuan taking the place of the petrodollar.”

Ing explained that China’s growing appetite for gold will further pressure the U.S. government’s fiscal situation. He noted that China’s U.S. Treasury holdings have dropped to a 14-year low at $775 billion. As it sells U.S. bonds, the central bank has been buying gold, increasing its reserves for the last 18 consecutive months.

“China’s diversification moves gives them more options which could further affect its huge holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds at a critical time since America needs others like China to help finance its whopping national debt at $34 trillion that is bigger than the combined economies of China, Germany, Japan, India and the UK,” he wrote in the report.

“Dollars are being utilized less and less as bullion gains a greater percentage of the reserves held by central banks worldwide. For China, gold is the new critical mineral,” Ing added.

At the same time, Chinese retail investors are also significantly impacting gold demand. Ing noted that Asia has become a leader in the gold market as the Shanghai Gold Exchange has emerged as the largest physical dealer in the world.

“We believe fiscal, monetary and geopolitical uncertainties have driven investors into gold as an alternative currency, or the classic store of value,” he said.

 

Along with his bullish outlook on gold, Ing said he sees potential and value within the mining sector, even as costs increase.

“The group is undervalued on multiple fundamentals (market cap/reserves, earnings, cash flow and balance sheets) particularly against the overvalued S&P 500,” he said. “We continue to like the senior producers like Barrick, and Agnico-Eagle. Developers are the next group, bringing on mines over the next couple years like B2Gold, Endeavour Mining, McEwen Mining and Eldorado. There are many explorers that are very cheap. But instead, we have focused on those players with advanced PEAs or FS which are likely to get financed in this current bull market.”

Kitco Media

Neils Christensen

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David

Gold prices remain under pressure as Fed sees possible rate hikes if inflation picks up

Gold prices remain under pressure as Fed sees possible rate hikes if inflation picks up

Although U.S. monetary policy has become a secondary factor in the gold market, persistent inflation could create some further selling pressure as it could force the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates again, according to the minutes from the Apri/May Federal Open Market Committee meeting.

In recent days, members of the monetary policy committee have said that while they are not ready to cut interest rates as inflation remains stubbornly elevated, they are also not looking to raise them.

However, the minutes of the meeting show that another rate hike could be a possibility.

“Various participants mentioned a willingness to tighten policy further should risks to inflation materialize in a way that such an action became appropriate,” the minutes said.

The gold market is not reacting significantly to the latest minutes. It is experiencing solid selling pressure as support at $2,400 broke down. June gold futures last traded at $2,390.20 an ounce.

The minutes reflected growing disappointment that consumer prices haven’t made better progress moving back towards the 2% target.

“Participants discussed the risks and uncertainties around the economic outlook. They generally noted their uncertainty about the persistence of inflation and agreed that recent data had not increased their confidence that inflation was moving sustainably toward 2 percent,” the minutes said.

“Participants noted disappointing readings on inflation over the first quarter and indicators pointing to strong economic momentum, and assessed that it would take longer than previously anticipated for them to gain greater confidence that inflation was moving sustainably toward 2 percent,” the minutes also said.

Although the central bank is not expected to shift its monetary policy stance anytime soon, the committee is looking at other factors that impact market liquidity.

The minutes said that nearly all participants expressed support for the decision to begin to slow the pace of decline of the Federal Reserve’s securities holdings in June by reducing the monthly redemption cap on Treasury securities from $60 billion to $25 billion, maintaining the monthly redemption cap on agency debt and agency mortgage‑backed securities (MBS) at $35 billion, and reinvesting any principal payments in excess of the $35 billion cap into Treasury securities.

“Some participants commented that slowing the pace of balance sheet runoff would help facilitate a smooth transition from abundant to ample reserve balances by reducing the likelihood that money markets experience undue stress that could require an early end to runoff.

Kitco Media

Neils Christensen

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David

Gold and silver prices seeing some follow-through buying following Friday’s breakouts

Gold and silver prices seeing some follow-through buying following Friday’s breakouts

Kitco NEWS has a diverse team of journalists reporting on the economy, stock markets, commodities, cryptocurrencies, mining and metals with accuracy and objectivity. Our goal is to help people make informed market decisions through in-depth reporting, daily market roundups, interviews with prominent industry figures, comprehensive coverage (often exclusive) of important industry events and analyses of market-affecting developments.

Gold and silver prices seeing some follow-through buying following Friday’s breakouts teaser image

Gold and silver are starting the week with increased volatility as investors continue to react to the precious metals' breakout moves on Friday and extend their follow-through through Sunday evening.

Overnight, gold futures rallied to a new all-time high of $2,454.20 an ounce; meanwhile, silver prices surged to $32.75. Although the precious metals were off their recent highs as the North American trading session kicks off, they are attracting some new momentum.

June gold futures last traded at $2,422.60 an ounce, up 0.20%on the day; meanwhile, July silver futures last traded at $31.81 an ounce, up 1.74% on the day.

 

Looking ahead, analysts expect that gold and silver prices will move higher. However, they recommend that investors avoid chasing the market at current levels.

David Morrison, Senior Market Analyst at Trade Nation, said that while silver looks overbought, last week’s move above $30 an ounce was a significant breakout.

“Silver has made incredible gains over the past fortnight, and it does look overbought at current levels. That would suggest that some profit-taking could come in now. But traders would have to be very brave or foolhardy to short a market moving this way,” he said in a note Monday.

Ole Hansen, Head of Commodity Strategy at Saxo Bank, said that although gold looks a little overbought, it remains a “buy on dips.”

“We believe some patience is called for, not least considering that investors may need more time to adjust and adapt to current high price levels. This includes central banks, major buyers since 2022, and whether their political motivation to buy bullion lifts their willingness to pay record prices,” he said in a note.

Hansen added that silver could have more potential than gold as it is just seeing its breakout move.

“Having already recorded the highest close in 11 years, a break could potentially set in motion an additional reaction from momentum-following funds, currently holding a relatively small net long futures position. The gold-silver ratio, which measures the relative strength between the two metals, trades around 80.5 ounces of silver to one ounce of gold, down from a January peak above 92, yet still above support at 78.50 and not least 76,” he said.

Analysts note that silver is finally outperforming in the precious metals sector as it is attracting significant attention as both a monetary metal and an industrial metal. Copper’s move to a record high above $5 per pound is creating some solid momentum for silver.

At the same time, relatively mixed inflation data last week is solidifying expectations that the Federal Reserve is on track to cut rates two times this year, supporting gold prices, which in turn is positive for silver.

“Given the current economic indicators and the anticipation of further dovish signals from the Federal Reserve, gold prices are likely to remain bullish in the short term,” said James Hyerczyk, Market Analyst at FXEmpire.com.

As to what levels traders and investors should watch, Julia Cordova, Founder of Cordova Trading, said that gold needs to hold $2,352.70 on any major correction.

Looking at silver, Cordova said that after Friday’s breakout, it has room to move higher.

“The daily measured move is now $32.785, and the weekly targets are $34.835 (inverse head-and-shoulders measured move) and $35.69 (bull flag measured move). $29.855 is the magic number that bulls want to hold on any pullback,” she said in her weekly report Sunday.

Kitco Media

Neils Christensen

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David

Gold Price News: Gold Rallies to Notch Up 1.9% Weekly Gain

Gold Price News: Gold Rallies to Notch Up 1.9% Weekly Gain

Gold News

Market Analysis

Gold prices powered up through the $2,400 an ounce mark on Friday, capping a strong week for the metal, which posted week-on-week gains of around 1.9%.

Gold prices touched a high of $2,419 an ounce on Friday, compared with around $2,379 an ounce in late trades on Thursday. That was the highest gold price since April 12.

Friday was light on macroeconomic data releases, and gold’s ability to push higher seemingly without the support of underlying economic data does highlight its natural appeal as a safe haven during times of geopolitical tension.

Recently-approved western financial support for Ukraine’s defence against Russian military attacks raises the ante and may indicate a long-drawn out conflict in the region, maintaining a risk of the confrontation spilling out into a wider war. These tensions, along with the ongoing clash between Israel and Hamas, continue to create a risk premium for gold prices.

On the demand side, the People’s Bank of China has announced gold purchases for 18 consecutive months, the World Gold Council said in a report May 15.

Total official gold holdings at the end of April were 2 tonnes higher at 2,246 tonnes, representing 4.9% of the bank’s total reserves – the highest ever, it said.

The latest figures from China build on recent interest in gold among central banks more broadly, amid signs that they are seeking to rebalance portfolios to include a higher weighting for low-risk assets like precious metals.

Looking ahead, the markets will be watching out for speeches by several US Fed officials on Monday and Tuesday, as traders scan for clues about the timing of interest rate cuts.

Frank Watson

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David

It hard not to get excited when you see a blockbuster deal like that’ – Adam Lundin on mining M&A

It hard not to get excited when you see a blockbuster deal like that' – Adam Lundin on mining M&A

'It hard not to get excited when you see a blockbuster deal like that' 

Big mining deals are going to bring needed attention to the mining sector and build more enthusiasm, noted Adam Lundin, chair of Lundin Group.

This week Adam spoke to Kitco Mining.

Earlier this month BHP Group announced a surprise takeover bid for Anglo American valued at over $31 billion.

"When you see blockbuster news like that, it's hard not to get excited," said Lundin. "I think M&A can be good for the sector, and I think it [brings] a lot of attention to the space and gets more eyeballs on it. Let's stay tuned and see how it plays out."

The Lundin Group's Lundin Mining (TSE:LUN) is up 62% year to date this year with a market cap of 13.6 billion thanks to a run in copper and other metals. The company is expected to produce between 366,000 to 400,000 tonnes of copper and between 155,000 to 170,000 ounces of gold in 2024.

Ludin Mining has a healthy pipeline. The Lundin's Josemaria project is to be developed as a large-scale open pit mining operation. As currently envisaged, over 1 billion tonnes of ore will be mined at average diluted head grades of approximately 0.30% copper, 0.22 g/t gold and a strip ratio of 0.98 over a 19-year mine life.

Kitco Media

Michael McCrae

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David

Silver’s in the spotlight as prices rally nearly 6% Friday, but it’s still gold’s show Silver’s in the spotlight as prices rally nearly 6% Friday, but it’s still gold’s show teaser image It has finally happened; silver is making a move and dragging

Silver’s in the spotlight as prices rally nearly 6% Friday, but it’s still gold’s show

It has finally happened; silver is making a move and dragging precious metals higher heading into the weekend.

According to analysts, the white metal is clearly in the driver’s seat as it lagged during gold’s breakout rally in the first quarter of the year. Not only has silver rallied above $31 an ounce, but the price is trading at its highest level since February 2013. July silver last traded at $31.635 an ounce, up 4.65% on the day.

Along with its 11-year high, silver is up more than 10% for the week, its best performance since early April.

Meanwhile, gold has seen a solid push above initial resistance, with some analysts predicting that it will move back to record highs sooner than expected. June gold futures last traded at $2,414.60 an ounce, up 1.34% on the day. The yellow metal is seeing nearly a 2% gain for the week.

Ole Hansen, Head of Commodity Strategy at Saxo Bank, noted the entire precious metals complex is seeing broad-based gains. Platinum has pushed to a one-year high; July platinum futures last traded at $1,094 an ounce, up more than 2% on the day.

Traders and analysts wrapped up Platinum Week as the precious metal saw a 9% gain from last Friday. Platinum’s $90 move this week is its best gain since February 2021.

Hansen added that the rally in all three metals and a significant drop in the gold-silver ratio indicate robust bullish sentiment in the marketplace, an indication that this breakout could lead to sustainably higher prices.

“The gold-silver ratio is not a million miles from its long-term average, so silver strength could mean general precious metal strength,” Hansen said.

Fawad Razaqzada, Market Analyst with the StoneX Group and creator of Tradingcandles.com, said that he expects this is just the start of a new rally as the dam in the silver market has finally burst with no major catalyst.

“This breakout move has been building for days,” he said.

Razaqzada pointed out that there is a lot of pent-up sentiment in the silver markets, as prices have been range-bound for 3.5 years. He noted that it's not surprising that silver is finally outperforming, as it benefits both as a monetary metal and an industrial metal.

Silver’s breakout move comes as copper looks to end the week at record highs above $5.00 per pound.

“Judging by copper's bullish breakout that took place a few months ago and is still going, I reckon [silver’s] breakout can be sustained,” he said.

Although silver is stealing the spotlight right now, some analysts warn that this rally is still gold’s show.

Gold has consolidated in elevated territory, near record highs, as geopolitical uncertainty, central bank demand, and robust retail demand in Asia support prices.

Mike McGlone, senior market strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence, said he still likes gold as a safe-haven asset, especially as the U.S. market looks overstretched and due for a correction.

McGlone added that the risk for silver is if investors start to take profits in copper. He explained that lower copper prices would weigh on the white metal.

“Copper managed money positions (hedge funds) are stretched a bit too much net-long to sustain much above $5 a pound and probably needs the S&P 500 to keep rising for buoyancy,” he said. “Silver is riding the coattails of copper and gold, in my view and the bottom line is China is buying gold but may be hoarding all metals.”

Julia Khandoshko, CEO at the European broker Mind Money, said she also sees more potential for gold in the current environment.

“The Federal Reserve's shift in rhetoric, particularly if it leads to a rate cut or a clear reduction plan, is expected to push gold prices upward. The escalation of the conflict in the Middle East will also support gold. As geopolitical risks grow, investors will buy even more gold, boosting the price,” she said.

Khandoshko added that she expects gold prices to resume their long-term uptrend as central banks continue to buy gold to diversify their foreign reserves.

“My estimates suggest that the accumulation pace is actually higher than what the IMF reports state,” she said.

Khandoshko said that silver will be sensitive to any data that highlights weak economic activity.

“Silver is just a commodity like copper, while gold is a hedging tool. Today, all metals, including silver, are growing for a simple reason—cautious sentiment on global economic growth. If we look at commodities charts, we can see they have a cyclical price trend: when there is an economic downturn, they are cheap; when the economy is recovering, they rise in price,” she said.

Philip Streible, Chief Market Strategist at Blue Line Futures, said that while he is bullish on gold and silver on this breakout move, a relatively quiet week could create some short-term profit-taking.

Some economists have said that the biggest risk for markets next week will be the plethora of Fed speakers. Six U.S. central bankers will speak at events on Monday and Tuesday.

The highlight of the week will be the minutes from the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy meeting that wrapped up May 1.

The economic reports on the docket next week are mostly second-tier, with some attention to home sales numbers and a preliminary sentiment survey in the manufacturing and service sectors.

The week ends with the release of May’s durable goods data.

Economic data to watch next week:

Wednesday: U.S. existing home sales, FOMC minutes from April/May monetary policy meeting

Thursday: S&P Flash Manufacturing and Service Sector PMIs, weekly jobless claims, U.S. new home sales

Friday: Durable goods orders

Kitco Media

Neils Christensen

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David

Wall Street sees gold prices challenging $2,500 next week, Main Street sentiment is more restrained

Wall Street sees gold prices challenging $2,500 next week, Main Street sentiment is more restrained

The gold market had plenty of significant economic data and in-depth Fed speak to digest this week, and the result was one of the most dramatic moves for precious metals markets this year.

Spot gold kicked off the week trading at $2,361.17 and spent Sunday and Monday treading water while eagerly awaiting the key inflation data to come. Tuesday morning brought a mixed PPI report, but markets took comfort in comments from Fed chair Jerome Powell two hours later when he told the Foreign Bankers’ Association that he was confident the central bank would not need to hike again. Gold prices turned positive on the week early Wednesday morning, and when the April CPI report showed month-over-month improvement, that was all traders needed to begin pushing the yellow metal higher still.

Wednesday evening’s triple top at the $2,400 level stalled momentum in the near term, with spot gold trending steadily downwards through Thursday's session. But by the North American market open on Friday, the bulls had returned in force, and once they propelled gold decisively through $2,400 per ounce around 10:00 am EDT, they never looked back.

The latest Kitco News Weekly Gold Survey has the overwhelming majority of industry experts believing gold prices could reach or surpass their all-time highs, while retail traders are a little more restrained on the precious metal’s prospects.

“I am bullish on Gold for the coming week,” said Colin Cieszynski, Chief Market Strategist at SIA Wealth Management. “The US Dollar appears to be backing off a bit along with treasury yields. Also, if it does break out over $2400 resistance, technically that could open the door to a potential run at the $2,500 big round number.”

James Stanley, senior market strategist at Forex.com, also believes gold has further to fly in the near term.

“Bulls put on a show this week and the move was pretty clean for the most part,” he said. “That continued the breakout from the falling wedge/bull flag in the prior week, and this week was all higher-highs and lows with a really strong move on Friday morning.”

“Chasing fresh highs is always a challenge but the 2400 level has quite a bit of reference given the tests last month, and so far on Friday there’s been indications of acceptance above that price,” Stanley added. “This keeps the door open for a possible run up to $2500.”

“Unchanged,” said Adrian Day, President of Adrian Day Asset Management, who expects gold will have trouble holding Friday’s lofty highs. “We shall likely see another attempt to cross $2,400 and then a small retreat. But gold’s resilience has been impressive, and sooner rather than later it will breach that level.”

“Dip buyers showed up in a big way over the past week, and the buzz around gold is building,” said Adam Button, head of currency strategy at Forexlive.com. “There are signs the US economy is slowing; more of that would bring rate cuts forward.”

Button said that this recent move is a continuation of the broader rally, and it’s being driven by the same source.

“This rally started in China, and China continues to show up,” he said, adding that recent data show Turkey and much of the Middle East are also buying bullion.

Button pointed out that this week’s meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese Premier Xi Jinping is also very bullish for gold prices.

“If you're a gold bull, the picture of Xi and Putin hugging is as good as it gets,” he said. “They're trying to create a multipolar world, and you can't do that if you're relying on the dollar.”

This week, 14 Wall Street analysts participated in the Kitco News Gold Survey, and after Friday’s breakout, the bullish sentiment was as strong as it’s been this year. Eleven experts, representing 79%, expected to see gold prices climb higher still next week, with only two analysts, or 14%, predicting a price decline. One lone expert, representing 7% of the total, saw gold trending sideways during the coming week.

Meanwhile, 144 votes were cast in Kitco’s online poll, with Main Street investors positive but not to the same degree. 83 retail traders, or 58%, looked for gold to rise next week. Another 30, or 21%, predicted it would be lower, while 31 respondents, representing 21%, expect the precious metal to remain rangebound during the week ahead.

After this week’s inflation data drama, markets will get a bit of a break next week. Wednesday will see the release of U.S. existing home sales for April, along with the FOMC minutes from the April/May monetary policy meeting. On Thursday, markets will receive the S&P Flash Manufacturing and Service Sector PMIs, weekly jobless claims, and April new home sales, and Friday will feature the April durable goods report.

Marc Chandler, Managing Director at Bannockburn Global Forex, sees evidence that gold prices are a little too high after this week’s breakout.

“Gold reclaimed the $2400 level ahead of the weekend and is poised to post a record high close (spot market),” he said. “The momentum indicators give the yellow metal scope to challenge the intraday high from April 12 near $2431.50. A note of caution is from the Bollinger Band, set two standard deviations above the 20-day moving average. Gold is trading above it. Also, I suspect that the US rate adjustment (lower with the 2yr yield bottoming near 4.70%) and softer dollar (euro is up for five consecutive weeks) is over or nearly so.”

Darin Newsom, Senior Market Analyst at Barchart.com, thinks gold may give back some of its recent gains.

“Purely a technical read as June looks to be nearing a potential top of its 5-wave short-term uptrend,” he said. “Daily stochastics indicate the contract is sharply overbought. As of early Friday morning, I have a reversal pattern telling me the trend is set to change, but there is a lot of week left today. We’ll see what happens through Friday’s close or possibly early Monday morning.”

Sean Lusk, co-director of commercial hedging at Walsh Trading, was watching the entire commodity complex catch fire on Friday, with precious metals leading the way.

“We're at $2,410, we're back up to high,” he said. “Silver's caught fire here, copper's caught fire as an industrial metal, platinum. It's really been a hell of a ride.”

“You can make an argument that crude's underperformed, still up a little over 10 on the year, nothing crazy,” he added. “But if that gets going that's going to bring everything else up. We’ll probably get a real hot summer here.”

Lusk told Kitco News that the combination of high inflation, massive debt issuance, and runaway central bank currency printing is pushing market participants into precious metals and other commodities.

“We've just printed too much money, and now you see the result of it,” he said. “Where are they putting all the money? Aside from, buying dips in equities, big money is going into metals as an inflation hedge. And not just us, but even economies around the world are doing the same thing. They're increasing their holdings, and nobody knows where to be.”

Lusk said that he can’t imagine a better situation than the current one to drive gold prices higher.

“It's a perfect storm of bullishness,” he said. “You have geopolitical worries. You had the pandemic. And what does our government do right after that? Prints more for all these funding projects that really haven't started yet. Now you're in a campaign year, so all those things, as they relate to gold, just create more uncertainties on the back end, and that's why you continue to run here.”

“It just goes back to the old adage, any time we create more of something, it's worth less,” Lusk said.

“Gold is headed higher, likely to take out $2,448.8 in the days ahead,” said Michael Moor, Founder of Moor Analytics. “We held exhaustion at $2,288.5 with a $2,285.2 low and rallied $138.5. The break back above $2,302 (+1.6 per/hour) has brought in $121.7 of strength. We took out final exhaustion at $2,385.3.”

And Kitco Senior Analyst Jim Wyckoff sees further gains for gold prices next week. “Higher, as charts firmly bullish,” he said.

Kitco Media

Ernest Hoffman

Time to Buy Gold and Silver

David