11/11/2024

Gold and silver remain under significant post-election pressure


OUTSIDE MARKET DEVELOPMENTS: Today is Veterans Day in the U.S. and Remembrance Day in Canada. Bond markets and central banks are closed in both countries. Stock and commodities markets are open.

Thank you to those who served.

The U.S. Republican Party edged closer to a majority in the House of Representatives over the weekend. The GOP needs four of the remaining 18 uncalled races to break their way to secure majorities in both Houses of Congress.


Full control of Congress will make it easier for the Trump administration to enact its policy agenda. Markets are optimistic with the prospect of lower taxes and less regulation leading to risk-on flows into shares at the expense of safe-haven assets like gold.

The market is however concerned Trump's policies, particularly his trade policies, will increase inflationary pressures. This may prompt the Fed to become less dovish…and potentially even hawkish.

The Fed cut rates by 25 bps last week, in line with expectations. The central bank steered clear of commenting on the election results in the policy statement. “In the near term, the election will have no effects on our policy decisions," said Fed Chairman Powell in the post-meeting presser.

Powell did acknowledge that there is a "fair amount of uncertainty" and the Fed doesn't think “it's a good time to be doing a lot of forward guidance.”  Fed funds futures still reflect expectations for another cut in December, but the outlook for future cuts has been trimmed.

A less-dovish Fed outlook, still dovish ECBSpeak, and hints of a more cautiously hawkish BoJ provide lift for the dollar. The dollar index reached a four-month high of 105.71.


GOLD

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CDT: -$21.61 (-0.80%)
5-Day Change: -$121.35 (-4.43%)
YTD Range: $1,986.16 - $2,789.68
52-Week Range: $1,812.39 - $2,789.68
Weighted Alpha: +30.48

Gold has extended to the downside to begin the new week, reaching a four-week low of $2,613.53. The yellow metal continues to be weighed by post-election risk-on flows.



Strong gains in stocks, dollar strength, and a less-dovish Fed outlook all conspire against gold at the moment. However, I believe these losses are corrective and the long-term uptrend remains intact.

Not surprisingly, there were 8.6 tonnes of net outflows from global ETFs last week. It was the biggest net outflow since the 26-Apr week. North American investors were the biggest sellers at -10.0 tonnes.

Spec longs in the futures market beat a retreat last week as well. The COT report showed that the net speculative long position was reduced by 23.4k to 255.3k contracts, versus 278.7k in the previous week.

CFTC Gold speculative net positions


A corrective/consolidative phase is likely as the market continues to hash out the implications of the election results. I am now less optimistic about new record highs before year-end.

 

Once the post-election dust settles, market focus will return to geopolitical tensions, concerns about the Chinese and European economies, central bank easing elsewhere in the world, soaring global debt levels, ongoing central bank gold buying, and the political uncertainty in Germany and Japan.

And if inflation is revived as many fear, gold is still the classic hedge. A number of bullish fundamentals remain aligned in gold's favor.

The next significant support level I'm watching is the October low at $2,606.62 (10-Oct). It corresponds closely with a trendline drawn off of the low for the year at $1,986.16.

With gold quite oversold on a short-term basis, we could see the bears ring up some profits and the bulls start testing the water ahead of this level. The 14-day RSI hasn't reached oversold territory, but it is the lowest it's been since February. Gold hasn't been oversold on the daily chart since October of 2023, a testament to the strength of the uptrend.

On the upside, I'm watching the 50-day moving average on a close basis as an important indicator. The 50-day MA is at $2,645.79 today and is bolstered by resistance marked by the 7-Nov low at $2,648.46.

However, a convincing move back above $2700.00 is needed to suggest the low for the range has been established. The halfway-back point of the correction thus far is at $2,701.16.

 

SILVER

OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CDT: +0.025 (+0.08%)
5-Day Change: -$1.976 (-6.09%)
YTD Range: $21.945 - $34.853
52-Week Range: $20.704 - $34.853
Weighted Alpha: +26.13

Silver has followed gold lower, reaching a five-week low of $30.447. Many of the same factors that have hit gold are also impacting silver.



While there is heightened optimism about the U.S. economy, the trade continues to be disappointed by Beijing's efforts to stimulate the world's second-largest economy. Last week was no exception and over the weekend China's inflation data for October reflected heightened deflation risks.
 
Last week's CFTC COT report showed the net speculative long position fell 7.1k to 53.3k contracts, versus 60.4k in the previous week. It was the biggest weekly drop in net spec longs since the week ended 26-Jul. 

CFTC Silver speculative net positions


Good support is noted at $30.293/229, where the 100-day moving average corresponds closely with the low for last month (9-Oct low). While the market may try to run stops below this important level, the short-term oversold condition may make a sustained penetration difficult.

However, if $30.293/229 does give way, focus would shift to $29.705 (61.8% retracement of the leg up from 26.524 to $34.853).

Former support at $30.921 now defines initial resistance. More substantial resistance is marked by today's high and the still-rising 50-day moving average is at $31.431/503. The halfway-back point of the decline thus far is well protected at $32.650.


Peter A. Grant
Vice President, Senior Metals Strategist
Zaner Metals LLC
Tornado Precious Metals Solutions by Zaner
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