Plunging U.S. Dollar, Bond Yields and $1,850 Gold: How It Could Happen

 | Nov 16, 2022 20:45

  • Dollar, Treasury yields must keep falling for gold to achieve $1,850 target
  • Fed rate pivot in December also crucial for gold rally
  • If Fed goes ahead with 50 bp hike, could still rise $30-50 an ounce
  • But if another 75 bp, gold could correct to $1,730
  • Heard of the phrase 'one cannot exist without the other?' Well, that's for your gold rally versus US dollar/bond selloff. In order for the yellow metal to continue rising in value, at least one of the other two has to drop.

    It wasn't always like that, of course.

    Two decades ago, a major geopolitical event such as the Ukraine invasion or the Middle East conflict would have been enough for gold prices to take off on their own. That used to be the so-called 'safe-haven play' in gold.

    Alas, today's macro trade no longer allows bullion such exclusivity. Case in point: Tuesday's spike in gold brought New York-traded COMEX futures to just $10 short of $1,800 an ounce amid speculation that Russian rockets meant for Ukraine may have misfired into Poland, killing two people. At a glance, it looked much like the yellow metal was acting as a hedge to a major geopolitical event.

    But a look at the dollar's chart would also show the currency not far from the three-month lows it plumbed earlier in the day, despite it gaining ground against the euro on the back of the missile incident—which itself was a bullish event for the dollar, given the negative implications for Europe and its single currency.

    Thus as bets grow now for gold to reach $1,850 soon from the upward momentum it has garnered lately, it would make sense to postulate as well where the dollar and US Treasury yields ought to be in order for that to happen.

    The three are acting in concert on the basis that the Federal Reserve would likely execute a rate hike of 50 basis points (bp) on Dec. 13 versus four previous increases of 75 bp each—achieving a so-called pivot in rates—amid a steady easing in inflationary pressure via falling consumer and producer prices.