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Gold price rising? Thank the weather | MINING.com

<b>Gold price</b> rising? Thank the weather | MINING.com


<b>Gold price</b> rising? Thank the weather | MINING.com

Posted: 14 Feb 2014 12:11 PM PST

The gold price jumped to a three-and-a-half-month high above $1,320 an ounce on Friday, capping one of its best weeks in years.

Gold's rise this year – it is up 9.8% so far – has been ascribed to a number of factors.

Some key technical levels have been breached, including the 200-day moving average on Friday which supposes further upward momentum.

Safe haven buying on turmoil in emerging markets boosted gold in January and continued strong physical demand from Asia has also provided a solid floor to the price.

But there are less obvious factors playing a role in gold's rise says independent researcher Capital Economics in a note out on Friday titled "Weather can impact commodity prices in odd ways":

"Of course, the main driver has been a revival of safe-haven demand triggered by the turmoil in emerging markets. But the adverse weather is probably the biggest single factor behind the recent run of disappointingly weak US economic data, which in turn has encouraged speculation that the Fed will keep monetary policy loose for longer, driving down bond yields and weakening the dollar (all positives for gold)."

Earlier this week Capital Economics reiterated its end-2014 forecast of $1,450 an ounce for gold, one of the more bullish predictions out there:

"We continue to expect further gains over the course of this year, helped by continued strong demand from China and an eventual easing of the import ban in India. Gradual tightening in US monetary policy could trigger fresh falls in 2015 and beyond, although the downside should be limited by the (probably rising) floor set by mining costs and an extended period of still (relatively) loose monetary policy across the developed world."

Image of Schell beer by Aaron Landry

<b>Gold Prices</b> Have Rebounded — but for the Wrong Reason <b>...</b>

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 04:30 AM PST

Gold Prices Have Rebounded — but for the Wrong Reason — Money and Markets - Financial Advice | Financial Investment Newsletter

Don&#39;t Be Fooled By <b>Gold Price</b> Action [SPDR Gold Trust (ETF <b>...</b>

Posted: 14 Feb 2014 07:19 AM PST

Gold prices are getting closer to 1,300 USD an ounce each day in spite of the Fed tapering. As I have written before (here), gold prices are driven by two major factors: real interest rates (the difference between nominal yields and expected inflation) which encompass the inflation hedge property and the opportunity cost of holding gold, and the US dollar. The link with the VIX is very loose on the contrary.

At first glance, gold prices are in sync with the direction suggested by real interest rates (see chart below).

The correlation between gold and the US dollar remains negative (after a blip in positive territory in early 2014). As the USD has drifted upward since the beginning of the year, this move should have partially curbed the rise of the yellow metal.

So gold prices are once again driven mostly by US real yields. The question is where could those rates be heading?

On the nominal front, UST yields are closely following the US news flow, not the jitters on emerging markets. I would not rule out a fall down to the 2.55% area in the short run (even 2.46%), especially since Yellen proved rather dovish on forthcoming rate hikes. Regarding tapering though, the word "significant" is strong enough for me to rule out any change in the tapering stance barring a dire negative strong shock on growth. Therefore, given my nominal growth forecast for US GDP growth in 2014, I would clearly lean toward UST yields around 3.25% at year-end.

Interestingly enough, and contrary to the normal relationship, the US 10-year inflation breakeven disconnected in late 2013 from nominal yields, first falling when nominal yields went up and then moving up while nominal yields were receding - a move that accentuated the downward trend in real yield and sustained the rise in gold.

A look at the chart below shows that the disconnect between the Fed inflation target (PCE deflator) and expected inflation is historically wide. It shows the success of the Fed in steering and anchoring long-term inflation expectations, but it would nonetheless suggest a slightly lower inflation breakeven rate in the near future. Said differently, inflation expectations (or its proxy here, inflation breakeven) should fall in the near future, bringing upward pressure on real yields, hence a negative pressure on gold prices.

Bottom Line: in the short run, barring any improvement in the news flow, US Treasuries nominal yields have some room to fall a little more. Given the stickiness of inflation expectations, real yield could fall sufficiently for gold prices to rise a little further. I see the 1,400 area as an upper limit (see chart below).

Yet, given the current disconnect of inflation expectations and the PCE deflator trend, it would be very challenging to expect real yields to breach the zero threshold as inflation expectations will have to adjust on the downside any time soon.

As a result gold may go up slightly above the 1,300 threshold, but any further rise would be challenging as the odds for much lower real yields are very low: tapering + GDP growth + disconnect between inflation B/E and observed inflation.

Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. (More...)

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