Gold Enters Bear Territory

 | Sep 27, 2022 22:09

US dollar strength and central bank tightening have weighed heavily on the gold market. And with further tightening expected there is room for more downside in the near term. However, the medium-term outlook is more constructiveh2 US Dollar strength and rising yields hits investor demand/h2

Given the amount of uncertainty at the moment coupled with high inflation, many in the market may have thought gold prices should be well supported. However, this has not been the case. Spot gold is trading at its lowest levels in more than two years and has fallen more than 20% from its recent peak in March, pushing it into a bear market.

The dominance of the US dollar has hit sentiment across the commodities complex and gold has not been spared in this move. The US dollar index has surged to a 20-year high. This strength is largely a result of the aggressive stance the US Federal Reserve has taken in terms of monetary tightening in order to fight inflation. And with inflation proving to be stickier than anticipated, the Fed is expected to be even more hawkish than originally thought for the remainder of the year. Our US economist is of the view that we will see a further 75 basis point (bp) hike in November and a minimum of 50bp in December, which would leave the target range at 4.25-4.5%.

Despite sticky inflation, real yields have also been climbing. 10-year real US yields have reached their highest levels in more than a decade and are firmly back in positive territory. Given the strong negative correlation between gold prices and real yields, it is not surprising to see that gold has struggled in this rising yield environment.

Higher yields increase the opportunity cost of holding gold, which appears to be turning investors off the yellow metal. Total known exchange-traded fund (ETF) holdings in gold have declined by almost 9% since April to stand at around 97.9m oz – levels we last saw back in January. Data from the World Gold Council shows that over August, ETF outflows amounted to 51 tonnes, which is the fourth consecutive month of net outflows. And it is pretty clear that the market is set to see further outflows in September.

Speculative positioning in COMEX gold is no better with speculators holding a net short position. The net short stands at 32,966 lots as of 20 September, which is the largest short speculators have held since late 2018. From a pure positioning point of view, speculators still have room to increase this short. Back in late 2018, the net short in COMEX gold was in excess of 100k lots.

h2 Weak investor interest in gold as yields surge/h2