Authored by Ven Ram, Bloomberg cross-asset strategist,
Gold is still hovering near a nominal record, but the scope for further gains from here may be limited.
Bullion approached $2,200 an ounce last week, annexing a new record, though stated in real terms, gold is still shy of its previous peak set more than a decade ago. Even at current levels, an investor who bought gold at the end of 2012, when it was trading around $1,675 an ounce, would still be sitting on losses of more than 3% after adjusting for the corrosive effect of inflation on the dollar.
Gold's recent ebullience stems in no small measure from interest-rate pricing in the US, where traders have revived bets for deeper rate cuts after Chair Jerome Powell indicated last week that the Fed isn't far from the level of confidence need to start loosening policy.
The markets are now pricing some 95 basis points of rate cuts from the Fed this year. A dovish dot plot this month - one I define as staying with the three reductions already indicated - may embolden traders to price in five full rate cuts this year.
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That will further engender a bid toward bullion, which will mean that it will eclipse its previous inflation-adjusted record of $2,250.
A hawkish dot plot would temper pricing for rate cuts and sap enthusiasm toward bullion, spurring a correction that may be well due in the short term.
Over the longer term, as the Fed actually starts cutting rates, bullion has potential, given that declining rates would enhance the allure of a non-yielding asset and its promise of high risk-adjusted return.
By Zerohedge.com
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Comments
The dollar is on a downhill trend. Without rises in its interest rates, it would have fallen further and faster . The reason is that dollar in now perceived as an unstable currency whose value is declining steadily and is being undermined by a growing global de-dollarization drive and a loss of share in the global oil trade. As a result, investors are shying away from the dollar and flocking to gold with Central banks reducing their dollar holdings and buying more gold in order to diversify their currency holdings.
Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Global Energy Expert