This is the scenario in which gold price jumps $300 this fall – RBC Capital Markets

Anna Golubova  Wednesday August 31, 2022

Even though gold is heading for its fifth monthly drop, a high price scenario of above $2,030 an ounce cannot be ruled out this fall, according to RBC Capital Markets.

After peaking above $2,000 an ounce back in March, gold is ending the month of August down more than 5% year-to-date, with December Comex futures last trading at $1,731.70 an ounce.

“The large rally that we saw at the beginning of the year, particularly as Russia invaded Ukraine, was the type of crisis performance typical of gold,” Christopher Louney, commodity strategist at RBC Capital Markets, told Kitco News.

But since then, gold has fallen from its yearly highs. And that’s because the particulars of this type of crisis were negative for the precious metal, Louney explained.

“It takes economic and financial fallout to get gold to perform more strongly in the long term,” he said. “And even though there’s certainly been financial and economic fallout, this crisis played out in a way that means higher rates and a stronger dollar, which when we think of a crisis, is not always the case. That’s part of why gold is priced the way it is.”

The macro drivers from aggressive rate hikes and a strong U.S. dollar have been keeping gold below $1,800 an ounce, RBC’s strategists added.

“Gold has been stuck. The day-to-day has been defined by expectations versus surprises in response to macro data or Fed speak. That sort of repricing of 50 versus 75-basis-point hikes and how long they last are what drives gold daily,” Louney said.

But the heightened geopolitical tensions could still support gold into the year-end, which is why a price tag above $2,000 is still possible this fall.

“Gold’s tug of war is happening against a high-risk environment. One where there is a war in continental Europe that’s ongoing. Also, I wouldn’t write off U.S.-China tensions over Taiwan. On top of that, there are the broader geopolitical trade intricacies of what is happening in terms of an energy crisis and economic performance more broadly,” Louney pointed out. “There is this high-risk perceived safe haven undercurrent that is a tailwind supporting gold above where the macro factors otherwise would put gold.”

Due to these opposing forces, RBC is pricing in two potential scenarios into the year-end — the middle and the high.

The middle one, defined by more rate hikes and a strong dollar, sees gold at $1,679 in Q3 and $1,663 in Q4, with an annual average of $1,773. “That’s a fair gold price if it were determined just by its macro drivers,” noted Louney.

The high scenario, which estimates more geopolitical risk and safe-haven undercurrents, puts gold at $2,036 in Q3, and $1,986 in Q4, with an annual average of $1,944 for 2022.

“This is the outlook where the geopolitical risks come to the fore and become the driving principles of how the gold price discovery process is done, such as more safe-haven flows into the ETFs and other gold assets. If the market becomes more concerned about the geopolitical risk or the broader risk faced by the economy, our high scenario is a fair bet,” Louney described.

Gold’s current trading pattern puts the precious metal between the RBC’s middle and high scenarios.

“It’s really about what investors are placing in the driver’s seat for gold — whether we’re in a risk-on environment or a risk-off environment. That question really matters. Those triggers can lead to higher gold price levels seen earlier this year,” Louney said.

On the economic front, RBC’s base case is a mild recession in the U.S., which will be enough to keep gold prices somewhat elevated but unlikely to lead to fresh record highs.

The ETF flows for gold is the one gauge to pay close attention to for the rest of the year, Louney added. “The ETF flows have not been good this year. That’s a good indicator of how the market views risk and the desire for a perceived safe haven,” he said.

By Anna Golubova


Dark clouds for equities in Sept. may be silver lining for gold, silver bulls

Jim Wyckoff _ Thursday September 01,2022

CNBC’s “Pro Playbook” email dispatch on Thursday said: “August was rough for Wall Street, and September could be more of the same. Data compiled by the Stock Trader’s Almanac shows September is on average the worst month for stocks.

Since 1950, the S&P 500 has averaged a loss of 0.5% in September, including a drop of 11.9% in 1974. The benchmark index has also posted September losses in the last two years, dropping 4.8% in 2021 and 3.9% in 2020. This historically weak performance for the month, along with August’s declines and expectations of even higher rates from the Federal Reserve and other central banks, raise concern over a potential retest of the mid-June lows” in the stock indexes.

The above scenario may be what puts in price bottoms in for the gold and silver markets. Gold hit a six-week low Thursday and silver a more-than-two-year low.

The metals markets (hard assets) and the stock market (paper assets) compete for trader and investor monies, and the turbulent months of September and October for the stock and financial markets may be just what the doctor ordered for the safe-haven gold and silver markets.

It can also be argued that the hawkish central banks and notions of weaker global economic growth that are likely to crimp consumer and commercial demand for metals, has now been factored into gold and silver prices.

Don’t be surprised if a “sell the rumor, buy the fact” scenario develops in the gold and silver markets in the near term, regarding the bearish central bank element for the metals.

Also, from a short-term technical perspective, the gold and silver markets are oversold, technically, and due for corrective bounces very soon.


The risk of gold price plunging below $1,700 is limited, says Standard Chartered


By Jim Wyckoff

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The Greatest Disconnect, Plus Expect Even More Physical Gold Demand

September 1, 2022

More “Transitory” Inflation

September 1 (KWN) – Charlie Bilello:  Eurozone inflation has moved up to 9.1%, its highest level ever. Meanwhile, the ECB only recently abandoned their negative rate policy by moving back to 0%. This is the greatest disconnect between easy monetary policy and unabating rising prices that the world has ever seen.

THE GREATEST DISCONNECT:
Interest Rates Are Far Below Inflation In Europe

Expect Even More Physical Gold Demand

Garic Moran:  Gold tested $1700 support in July, Swiss exports exploded. Opec was openly on the buy side of Gold in years. This test of $1700 will create more central bank demand for Gold than July…

US Dollar May Weaken Before Strengthening…Again

From top Citi analyst Tom Fitzpatrick:  Both the DXY and USDJPY failed to complete bullish outside months on Wednesday with closes above 109.29 and 139.39 respectively. Today, however, price action continued higher and closed above both levels, setting new 2022 highs in process. This continues to support our strong USD view; however, given payroll numbers on Friday and, the extended US holiday weekend, we’re a bit cautious in the short-term.

In the medium-term, we bias USD strength, targeting 117.50 on the DXY (double bottom neckline at 102.99) with resistance at 115.47 (long-term ascending resistance) and 121.02 (2001 high). This bias is especially true with USDJPY. We’re watching for a move to the 1998 high at 147.66 given the bullish outside months completed on US5YR, 10YR and 30YR charts with closes above 3.21%, 3.10%, and 3.28%, that suggest an acceleration back to the 2022 highs at 3.62%, 3.50%, and 3.49% respectively.

US Dollar Index Target 117, Then 120
US Dollar Target 148 vs Yen

US Dollar And Gold

GSDesk note:  There is significant physical gold demand across the globe. We will keep a close eye on how the currency markets will impact the gold market. Remember, there are times where the US dollar and gold rise together because gold is in a bull market vs all fiat currencies.

Remain patient.

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