No One Is Watching Gold, They Should

 | Apr 16, 2021 22:11

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Gold had an ugly first quarter
  • The price is sitting near a midpoint
  • Digesting gains in all currency terms
  • Consolidation is not bearish
  • Stimulus is bullish - Watch for central bank buying

In August 2020, when gold hit its all-time peak at $2063 per ounce, the yellow metal was the hottest asset in markets. Gold reached an all-time high in US dollar terms last August, but it had been breaking records in other currencies since 2019.

When gold reached its peak, Bitcoin was below the $12,700 level. Since then, gold corrected, and Bitcoin moved almost five times higher. At the $1744.80 level at the end of last week, gold was $318.20 or over 15.4% below its high from less than one year ago.

Gold fell with the US bond market. In early August 2020, the US 30-year Treasury bond futures were at 183-06. Last week, they were below the 157 level, over 14.5% lower. Gold and bonds have been moving in lockstep. Higher interest rates have weighed on the yellow metal as they increase the cost of carrying gold and provide an alternative to gold. Moreover, the ascent of Bitcoin and digital currencies have attracted capital away from the gold market.

The gold bull market began at the turn of this century at the $250 per ounce level. For over two decades, every dip in gold turned out to be a buying opportunity. The uglier the market looked, the better the result for the brave gold value-seekers. At the beginning of April 2021, gold remains out of favor, which could be the perfect reason to load up on the yellow metal that rallies when it looks the worst and corrects when it seems like it is about to go parabolic.

h2 Gold had an ugly first quarter/h2

The falling bond market pushed interest rates higher during the first quarter of 2021. The nearby US 30-year Treasury bond futures contract fell 10.53% despite the Fed’s quantitative easing purchases of $120 billion per month of debt securities. The bonds erased the 10.98% 2020 gain. Rising interest rates tend to be bearish for the gold market.

Meanwhile, the dollar index rose 3.72% in Q1 after falling 6.42% in 2020. Rising rates and an appreciating dollar caused gold to be the worst-performing precious metal over the first three months of 2021.