After the worst June since 2013, is gold price ready to rebound?

After the worst June since 2013, is gold price ready to rebound?

After dropping more than 7% in June, gold is trying to rebound. Can the precious metal see $1,800 an ounce breached next week as higher inflation continues to worry industry experts? Here's a look at Kitco's top three stories of the week:
 

!. Gold saw its worst June since 2013
 

2. Is recession next? El-Erian is concerned the 'Fed is falling behind' on inflation story

 

3. Higher inflation for the next 5 years: 'be overweight stocks, gold, and commodities,' says WisdomTree's research head
 

By Anna Golubova

For Kitco News
 

Contact agolubova@kitco.com

www.kitco.com
 

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

David

Gold price has a chance to break out next week, here’s why – analysts

Gold price has a chance to break out next week, here's why – analysts

Gold could see a significant rally above the $1,800 an ounce level next week after the release of the Federal Reserve's June monetary policy meeting minutes, analysts told Kitco News.

One of the biggest events to watch next week will be the Federal Reserve's monetary policy meeting minutes. The meeting, which took place in mid-June, triggered a significant selloff in gold.

"Markets are expecting a hawkish tilt, and anything that tells us there is no hawkish tilt is a little bit less than people were pricing in. You can get a big rally in gold," TD Securities head of global strategy Bart Melek told Kitco News.

Market participants will be closely monitoring whether the hawkish comments made by some of the Fed members during the last few weeks match up with the notes from the meeting minutes.

"FOMC meeting minutes are interesting in the event if they contradict anything that we've heard from the Fed so far, especially from some of the more hawkish Fed members," said Gainesville Coins precious metals expert Everett Millman.

Gold is ending the week on a strong note as prices are once again trying to breach the $1,800 an ounce level following a mixed U.S. employment report.

"We got 850,000 new jobs added to the economy in June, but the unemployment rate went up to 5.9%. The participation rate was also still very weak, which means there is no particular impetus for the Fed to tighten monetary policy anytime soon. And that is good for gold," Melek said. "We are also seeing wage growth slowing, and that implies that inflation is likely transitory and there is no big reason for the Fed to start raising rates."

It is still not clear whether there is enough momentum to propel gold much higher next week, but Melek does see prices returning to $1,900 an ounce in the next six months.

Another driver to watch is the movement in the oil price, added Millman, noting that any additional price hike will end up working in favor of gold.

"I'm interested in what happens at the OPEC+ meeting. Uncertainty around oil could have big implications for inflation, and that is still one of the main drivers for gold," he said. "If they come to an agreement to limit output, that should push oil prices higher."

Higher oil prices feed into higher inflation, and that is positive for gold, Millman elaborated. "It's interesting in the case of Russia too, which is such a big OPEC+ player. Russia is reliant on energy markets for its economy, and it hasn't been buying gold lately. If oil rises, the country could see extra funds and possibly start purchasing gold again," he said.

Some analysts noted that it'd been a frustrating time for the gold bulls.

"It's been one step forward and two steps back," said Walsh Trading co-director Sean Lusk. "Gold couldn't hold $1,800 and went down to mid-April lows of around $1,760s. Now we are popping back up on unemployment data. Everything screams inflation, but the problem has been the rally in the U.S. dollar."

Lusk is optimistic for July because of gold's seasonality coming back. "We are coming back into traditional gold buying pattern in mid-July. The wedding season takes hold. There is a buying bias. Cyclical trade is entering back into the market," he said.

A breakout above $1,820 next week would open the door for another rally in gold, said RJO Futures senior commodities broker Daniel Pavilonis. "If we close above it, gold could go much higher and even make new highs."
 

Data to watch

It will be a fairly light data week due to the U.S. celebrating Independence Day. Aside from the Fed's meeting minutes on Wednesday, markets will be paying close attention to the ISM non-manufacturing PMI on Tuesday and jobless claims on Thursday.

"The ISM services index is probably the premier number and should show the sector is growing very strongly with increased business opportunities thanks to the reopening," said ING chief international economist James Knightley.

 

By Anna Golubova

For Kitco News

 

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

David

The last trading day of the first half of 2021 concludes, and gold incurs losses

The last trading day of the first half of 2021 concludes, and gold incurs losses

Now that the last trading day has concluded for the second quarter or first half of 2021, it is clear that gold had a difficult time incurring lower pricing over the last six months. Gold futures opened at $1954 on the first trading day in January and closed today at $1770.60, suffering a drawdown of $184. That means that gold lost 9.416% in value over the first half of 2021.

Headwinds from dollar strength, a flight into the cryptocurrencies during the first quarter of 2021, higher yields in U.S. debt instruments, and a strong U.S. equities markets all contributed to gold’s price demise during the first half of this year.

The U.S. dollar index traded at 89.85 on the first trading day of 2021 and is currently fixed at 92.345, gaining 2.495 points in the first half of 2021. This is an increase of approximately two ½% in the value of the U.S. dollar when compared to a basket of six major currencies.

Both the NASDAQ Composite and Standard & Poor’s 500 were extremely strong, closing at or near record levels by the close of trading today. The S&P 500 closed at a record high, with the NASDAQ composite closing slightly lower on the day after hitting a record high close earlier this week. According to Dow Jones data, the three major U.S. stock indexes recorded the best two-quarter performance since 2019.

ADP report shows that 692,000 jobs were added in June

The precursor to Friday’s U.S. Labor Department’s jobs report is the ADP (Automatic Data Processing) private sector came in today, indicating that 690,000 private-sector jobs were added from May to June. Economists polled had forecasted that the ADP report would indicate between 550,000 and 600,000 new jobs created. Obviously, the actual numbers came in well above economic forecasts. Concurrently the May numbers were revised down to 886,000 jobs from the original number of 978,000. The service sector was the primary recipient of new jobs with gains of 624,000, with good producing jobs coming in at 68,000.

It is currently believed that the ADP numbers are quite in line with expectations for the U.S. Labor Department’s nonfarm payroll, which will be released on Friday. Currently, the forecast for Friday’s jobs report is an additional 706,000 new jobs added. If the jobs report comes in in line with economic forecasts, it would indicate an uptick from the 559,000 new jobs reported by the Labor Department in May 2021. The forecast for the unemployment rate is looking for a downtick from 5.8% to 5.6%. Considering that the unemployment rate in June 2020 was at 11.1%, a large part of our unemployed workforce has returned after finding gainful employment.

While the ADP jobs report is a precursor to Friday’s U.S. Labor Department report, it is not always a great indicator of the numbers that will be revealed on Friday. However, it has been more than just jobs filled in the United States that has pressured gold pricing lower over the first half of this year. As we spoke about at the beginning of this letter, it has been a combination of multiple fundamental factors that resulted in an almost 10% decline in gold pricing. What will occur over the second half of 2021 is hard to estimate. A main factor and focus will be how hot inflationary pressures get. Although the CPI has grown to a 5% inflationary rate, and the PCE is now almost double the mandate of the Federal Reserve at 3.9%, inflationary pressures could most certainly be sustained and not temporary as the Fed continues to insist they will.

 

Wishing you, as always, good trading and good health,
 

By Gary Wagner

Contributing to kitco.com

 

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

 

David

Gold and silver start the European session mixed

Gold and silver start the European session mixed

Gold and silver are trading mixed this morning. The yellow metal suffered from more losses on Tuesday after hitting a low of $1750.78/oz and this morning the price is around $9 higher. Silver on the other hand trades at $25.81/oz 0.28% higher overnight after also dropping in yesterday's session. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper has moved to $4.25/lb 0.14% higher and spot WTI is trading just under flat at $73.40/bbl.

Indices in the Asia Pac area were slightly mixed. The ASX (0.16%) and Shanghai Composite (0.30%) closed higher while the Nikkei 225 dropped -0.07%. Futures are pointing towards a negative open in Europe.

In the FX markets, the antipodeans were the best performers overnight as AUD/USD (0.14%) and NZD/USD (0.15%) both traded higher. The dollar index lost 0.08% in value. In crypto markets, BTC/USD has dropped -2.48% after a decent session on Tuesday.

Looking at the news from overnight, Japanese industrial production (MoM) (May) hit -5.9% vs the analyst expectations of -2.4%.

 

ECB's Villeroy thinks inflation should go up a bit this year then down again in 2022, 2023.

U.K. prelim Q1 GDP printed at -1.6% vs expectations of -1.5% q/q.

China official PMIs for June. Manufacturing 50.9 (vs. expected 50.8), Services 53.5 (expected 52.7).

Fed's Waller says the U.S. jobs market has not quite come back to pre-COVID. Waller added he has a very optimistic outlook for the economy and he is not ruling out a 2022 rate hike.

There are newspaper reports that double-vaccinated people in the U.K. will not have to isolate if they come into contact with someone who has COVID-19.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include German employment numbers, EU CPI, U.S. ADP jobs numbers, Canadian GDP, U.S. pending home sales and weekly oil DoE's. We could also hear from Fed's Barkin, Bostic, BoE's Haldane and ECB's Panetta.

 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

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

 

David

Gold, silver price unleashed – Will this summer be as explosive as 2020’s?

Gold, silver price unleashed – Will this summer be as explosive as 2020's?

It's going to take gold until the end of the year to rally to $2,000 an ounce, said Phil Streible, chief market strategist of Blue Line Futures.

"I really believe [gold] could get going. $2,000 would capture some headlines on the upside. I think it has the right dynamics for it. You need the Fed to backpedal. You need growth to kind of stall," Streible told David Lin, anchor for Kitco News.

However, it's unlikely that the rally will start this summer and mirror last summer's explosive price action, Streible said.

"You've got two different things. The 10-year [U.S. Treasury bond yield] hit its all-time low last August," he said. "We don't have the Treasury dynamic in there, so what happened then is different from now."

Additionally, investors from traditionally large gold markets, like India, need to shift their capital back into gold.
 

Indian crypto investments grew from an aggregate holding of $200 million last year to $40 billion this year, according to data from Chainalysis

A shift back into gold from cryptocurrencies in India would provide a huge boost to the price, Streible said.

For more information on key price levels to monitor, watch the video above. Follow David Lin on Twitter @davidlin_TV.

 

By David Lin

For Kitco News

 

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

David

Basel III to take gold to record highs?

Basel III to take gold to record highs?

After an unexpected selloff last week, gold is busy building support. But the $1,800 level is proving to be a struggle.

 

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

1. The Yellen-Powell duo keeps the markets on their toes as they talk down the Federal Reserve's hawkish June monetary policy meeting.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell' comments

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's comments

2. Bitcoin drops below $30,000, briefly erasing all the year-to-date gains.

3. Many investors underestimate the impact of Basel III on the gold market, says Goldex CEO Sylvia Carrasco.

 

By Anna Golubova

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

David

Gold and silver are trading higher ahead of the European open

Gold and silver are trading higher ahead of the European open

Gold and silver are trading higher leading into the European session on the last trading day of the week. On Thursday gold had another tricky session hitting a high of $1788.1/oz before closing lower and finishing the session at $1775.22/oz. Silver on the other hand has had two days worth of gains and has made a good start so far this morning. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper has used 0.28% higher and spot WTI trades 0.10% in the black.

Looking at risk sentiment overnight the major bourses all moved higher. The Nikkei (0.66%), ASX (0.45%) and Shanghai Composite (1.19%) followed the positive lead from Wall St. Futures in Europe are also pointing towards a positive open.

In FX markets, the biggest mover overnight was once again NZD/USD which rose 0.31%. The dollar index is starting today's session 0.08% lower. In the crypto space, after a daily decent rally yesterday BTC/USD trades 1.62% in the red.

Looking at the major news from late yesterday and overnight, Biden and Co looked to have finally secured the infrastructure spending bill.

US Senate's McConnell says infrastructure framework an 'encouraging sign of progress'China's Bitmain has halted sales of cryptocurrency mining machines to ease selling pressure.

Fed says banks pass stress tests – to lift pandemic restrictions on share buybacks, dividends after June 30

Fed's Barkin says the current rise in inflation is clearly due to temporary factors. He added he doesn't think the U.S. is at max employment yet.

Germany's Altmaier said expects US, EU can agree on steel, aluminum tariffs before the end of the year

U.K. GfK Consumer Confidence (Jun) -9 vs exp -7 prev -9

GfK German Consumer Climate (Jul) -0.3 vs exp -4.0 prev -6.9

Tokyo Core CPI (YoY) (Jun) 0.0% vs exp -0.1% prev -0.2%

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include EZ money supply, U.S. PCE data, Michigan Consumer Sentiment data and the weekly Baker Hughes oil rig count data.
 

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 holding, a big move is coming

Gold and silver holding, a big move is coming

Gold and silver are setting up for a much bigger move. They have been vacillating in a tight range for the last five days. This pattern is known as consolidation, which is always a precursor to a much bigger move. Based on the current trend, which is lower, we expect that move to be lower.

We know that the next move can be in either direction, but the odds favor down. However, we can make a case for a reversal as well. The moving average over the last couple of days has some positive signs that could create a rally. We are short and will stay there knowing that the current direction favors us.

When trading in any market, the most important thing we can do is be flexible and not stubborn. If we remember the market is always right and the price is absolute, we must let the price action determine our trades and direction.

As support in gold and silver hold, two things are occurring: one, the inability to collapse could lead to a reversal; two, the last couple of days have seen higher lows. For now, we are tenuously short but ready to reverse if necessary.

Patience, discipline, and money management always win the day.

By Todd 'Bubba' Horwitz

Contributing to kitco.com

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

David

Gold is trading marginally higher at the European open

Gold is trading marginally higher at the European open

Gold is trading marginally higher leading into the European open on Tuesday. Silver on the other hand is trading just under flat at $25.88/oz after finding some support at $25.55/oz. In the rest of the commodities complex, copper trades 0.23% higher and spot WTI trades 0.25% in the black.

In terms of risk sentiment overnight, the Nikkei 225 (2.12%), ASX (1.48%) and Shanghai Composite (0.69%) all took the lead from Wall st to trade higher. Futures in Europe are pointing toward a positive open.

In FX markets, the dollar index moved 0.18% higher overnight and the biggest mover was AUD/USD which fell 0.34%. In the crypto space, BTC/USD has moved 3.34% higher and held above 30K once again.

In terms of news from the overnight session, Australia's largest city (Sydney) has extended its mask mandate to deal with coronavirus cases rising.

There are unconfirmed reports that Biden met with Manchin and Sinema on Monday for talks about the infrastructure deal. Biden was said to be encouraged by the shape of the deal but said questions still remain.

Japan May final machine tool orders 141.9% vs 140.7% y/y prior. Japan Core CPI, 0.0% y/y vs -0.1% prior.

NY Fed's Williams says the Fed is talking about talking tapering.

Fed Chair Powell said Inflation has picked up noticeably, job gains should pick up in the months ahead.

Looking ahead to the rest of the session highlights include U.K. CBI industrial trends, U.S. existing home sales, Fed's Chair Powell testifies. We could also get comments from ECB's Lane, Schnabel, Fed's Daly and Mester.

 

By Rajan Dhall

For Kitco News

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

David

Gold’s shocking fall: Is the bull market over?

Gold's shocking fall: Is the bull market over?

Gold shed nearly $100 in just 24 hours this week, with the precious metal dropping 5% on Thursday. The trigger was the Federal Reserve's interest rate announcement.

A surprisingly hawkish stance led to some chaotic trading and gold dropped below the $1,800 an ounce.

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

1. Federal Reserve signals it could raise rates twice in 2023

2. Why is gold down $100 after Fed shakes up markets?

3. 'Big Short' investor Michael Burry warns of 'greatest speculative bubble of all time'
 

By Anna Golubova

For Kitco News

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

David