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Gold holds gains on China saber-rattling, stimulus expectati

  • Gold rises on haven demand after Chinese military drills in the strait of Taiwan create an international incident. 
  • China’s fiscal stimulus also supports Gold as the country is the largest market for the yellow metal. 
  • Technically, XAU/USD reaches a key resistance level at the top of its multi-week range.

Gold (XAU/USD) recovers to trade back in the $2,660s on Monday amid rising safe-haven demand after saber-rattling by the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) in the strait of Taiwan. This prompted a spokesperson from the US Department of State to say on Monday, that they were “seriously concerned” with the PLA’s activities in around Taiwan.

Gold rises on China factor

Gold may also be gaining due to a more positive outlook for the Chinese economy as the country is the largest market for the precious metal. On Saturday, Chinese Finance Minister Lan Fo’an announced a much-anticipated fiscal stimulus programme. Although no figures were given, he said Beijing would help regional governments tackle their debt problems with a large-scale local government debt swap. 

Lan further suggested the government’s stimulus package could mark a multi-year turning point in China's “fiscal policy framework”.

More central bank rate cuts in the pipeline

A further driver for Gold is the continued downward projected path of interest rates globally. The European Central Bank (ECB) will conclude its October meeting on Thursday and most analysts expect the bank to announce another 25 basis point (bps) (0.25%) rate cut – their second cut in a row. Such a move would signal a significant “gear change up” in terms of the pace and timing of the ECB’s easing cycle.  

In the US, meanwhile, investors expect a 25 bps rate cut from the Federal Reserve (Fed) in November after US Producer Price Index (PPI) inflation data on Friday  showed headline PPI was unchanged on a monthly basis in September – missing expectations of a 0.1% increase and the prior month’s 0.2% reading. Core PPI inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, slowed to 0.2% from 0.3% in August. 

Annual readings, however, resulted mixed, as PPI decelerated while core PPI rose by 2.8%, above the prior month’s 2.6%. Although mixed annual performance, the monthly readings weighed, as did the preliminary US Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index for October, which fell below September’s reading and analysts’ estimates. 

The CME FedWatch Tool is showing the markets are now pricing in around a 90% chance of a 25 bps Fed rate cut – up from 83% before the PPI data.