Gold (XAU/USD) trades marginally lower in the $2,510s on Tuesday as tensions in the Middle East dissipate, reducing haven demand for the yellow metal. This comes after Israel and Hezbollah’s tit-for-tat missile exchange fails to escalate, though ongoing threats from Iran hover.
Gold may also be edging lower after the release of better-than-expected US Durable Goods Orders data on Monday. The 9.9% rise recorded in July was the highest reading since May 2020 and helped dispel some of the pessimism surrounding the US economy. This, in turn, probably acted as an antidote to expectations the Federal Reserve (Fed) will need to cut interest rates aggressively to avoid a hard landing.
A more gradual programme of cuts would limit the upside for Gold, which is a non-interest paying asset that tends to be viewed more attractively the lower rates are.
The probability of the Fed making a mega 0.50% interest rate cut in September rather than the standard 0.25% reduction has eased back down below 30%. It had risen up to around 35% after Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Jerome Powell made the clearest signal yet that cuts were in pipeline at his speech in Jackson Hole on Friday.
Gold edges lower on Tuesday as safety demand eases. US Air Force General C.Q. Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said early Tuesday that fears of a near-term broader Middle East conflict between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah have eased following a lack of escalation. Nonetheless, the US top General warned that “Iran still poses a significant danger as it weighs a strike on Israel,” according to Reuters.
The US Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the strength of the Dollar against a trade-weighted basket, is off its lows, recovering marginally to 100.88 on Tuesday. Gold is negatively correlated to the US Dollar (USD) as it is priced in USD.
Gold is likely to go higher but is also at risk of a sharp pullback due to extreme long positioning, according to Bart Melek, Head of Commodity Strategy at TD Securities.
“More upside is in the cards in coming months, but fund heavy long positioning represents a short-term correction risk,” says the strategist.
Given the Fed’s new focus is on its other mandate to provide “full employment”, there is a risk that strong employment figures could trigger an unwinding of these longs and a correction.
“A stronger-than-expected Payrolls print or any other event, which reduces the expectations of rate cuts, could trigger these players to take profits, causing a significant correction,” adds Malek.
TD Securities’ long-term upside target for Gold is $2,700, with the potential for major central bank players such as the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) providing the demand to push the precious metal up to those highs.
One possibility might be that the PBoC (and other major investors) who stopped accumulating Gold back in May – presumably because it was hoping prices would come back down to more favorable levels – may decide not to wait any longer due to fear of missing out, and start buying at current levels again, adds Malek.