Gold: After Record High, Is $2,000 the New Support? 

 | May 04, 2023 19:28

  • The possibility of the Federal Reserve pausing its rate hikes has led to a surge in gold prices, reaching a new all-time high above $2,080 an ounce.
  • Traders are betting that policymakers will be forced to stop raising rates to avoid further damage to the US banking sector and economy caused by overly-tight credit conditions.
  • For gold to remain above the $2,000 support level, the dollar and US Treasuries must also remain supportive
  • The Federal Reserve hasn’t said for sure that it will pause its rate hikes from June. Yet, in the hours between Jerome Powell’s news conference after the Fed’s tenth post-pandemic rate hike and the start of Thursday’s electronic trading session in gold, bulls in the game had decided: It was time for a new record high.

    Consequently, that means something else could come into play for gold: A new support level of $2,000 an ounce.

    Both futures of the yellow metal on New York’s Comex and physically-traded gold bullion reached all-time highs above $2,080 an ounce on bets that policy-makers would have no choice but to halt rate hikes from here to prevent further ructions in the US banking sector and economy due to overly-tight credit conditions.

    The last time gold got to record highs prior to this was in August 2020, in the aftermath of the coronavirus outbreak. Then, futures hit almost $2,080 while the spot price reached around $2,075.

    The Fed, in its rate decision statement as well as Chairman Powell’s news conference, took pains to emphasize that the fight against inflation wasn’t over and that monetary policy from June onwards will be guided by assessment of upcoming data.

    Even so, the dollar and US Treasury yields tanked on the mixed messaging traders got — yes, inflation was still high but it had also “moderated somewhat” and the “very, very strong” labor market had begun to see lower wages — prompting bets by gold bulls and other risk investors that the central bank was done with hikes.

    Ed Moya, analyst at online trading platform OANDA, said just ahead of Thursday’s peaks in gold:

    “The journey to record highs has been a long one for gold, but if the Fed is truly done lifting rates, further tightening of credit conditions could be the key catalyst.

    Gold is rising as the Fed’s dovish hike may have sealed the fate for the dollar. The Fed could be forced to hike again, but that would require a stronger driving force than the cumulative impact of their 10 rate hikes and fresh economic and financial developments.”

    The Dollar, Treasuries & Gold Interplay for $2,000 Support/h2