logo-loader

Gold consolidates above US$1,300, and could go higher

Published: 05:00 29 Jan 2019 EST

1548756252_Gold-bar-plus-nugget
Gold is at US$1,308 at the time of writing

The price of gold is now consolidating above the US$1,300 mark, following Friday’s upward move.

Plenty of analysts and industry watchers expect it to stay at current levels or even push higher, as the global appetite for risk wanes and investors move once again into safe-haven assets.

The underlying causes for this move aren’t too hard to find: The broad context is the ongoing uncertainty about the global economy, particularly in regard to the swings in sentiment around US-China trade talks.

Then there’s the new cautious note being sounded by the Federal Reserve. According to the consensus view in the market, and contrary to its former position, the Fed will probably not raise rates at all this year. Not everyone agrees with that prognosis, though. ING put out a dissenting view arguing that there will likely be two rate rises, in spite of the new prevailing caution.

Fed's balance sheet

But there is an additional factor regarding the Fed, which the market is beginning to take account of. Not only is the Fed looking to raise rates where it can, but it’s also looking to pare back its balance sheet significantly.

The Fed’s balance sheet ballooned from the high hundreds of billions of dollars to more than US$4tn after the global financial crisis, but in recent months, under the stewardship of Jerome Powell, this is being pared back somewhat.

Not everyone likes that policy, including the man who appointed Mr Powell, Donald Trump, and it has been blamed for stoking market volatility. When Mr Powell said the programme of asset sales remained on “automatic pilot” last year, the S&P dropped heavily. And in turn, when later he said that it was actually “flexible”, the S&P delivered its best gains over an hourly period in 12 months.

At issue is a scarcity of reserves in the Fed itself, as banks withdraw assets in response to the Fed’s own paring. And that’s making markets jittery. Some argue that the Fed will have to slow down, and it may be that some such announcement is forthcoming in the policy statement due on Wednesday.

But either way, the uncertainty makes for a more attractive environment for gold.

Global woes

Add in secondary factors like the Brexit crisis in the UK, a general slowing of the European economy, most notably in Germany, and the weakening of the dollar after the shutdown of the US government appeared to end in defeat for Donald Trump, and the immediate outlook is certainly favourable.

An escalation of the developing crisis in Venezuela could be another flashpoint.

Over the last week shares in Barrick Gold Corporation (NYSE:GOLD) have moved up by more than a dollar to US$12.34. That move followed a period of short-term weakness following the completion of the combination with Randgold Resources. But there are plenty of Barrick bulls to be found out there now that gold is back above US$1,300 for the first time since the early part of last year.

 

Xeris Biopharma Surpasses 2023 Expectations with Strategic Moves Poised for...

Xeris Biopharma CEO Paul Edick joined Steve Darling from Proactive to share news the company had a successful 2023, with a final tally of 164 million USD, which is at the upper end of their forecast. The company concluded the year with 72 million USD in cash, surpassing their initial projections...

10 hours, 4 minutes ago