Will Gold Reach For The Stars, Or Just Hit The Tree Tops?

 | Sep 13, 2019 18:53

The ECB has finally cut its deposit rate to a record low of minus 0.5%. And the Fed gets its chance to cut rates next, along with a host of other central banks, including Japan’s. The question is, what will gold do?

Compared to its scintillating run between May and August, gold’s performance in recent days has been nothing short of anemic.

Even after the European Central Bank’s return to quantitative easing on Thursday, the yellow metal barely settled higher. The only consolation is that it got a huge pop early in the day that vanished on profit-taking before the close.

How High Will Gold Go; How Long Will It Last At Those Peaks?/h3

All this makes gold’s next breakout hard to predict—from how high it will go, to how long the run-up will last.

So, to reprise the question: What will gold longs do if the Federal Reserve cuts rates on Sept 18, as widely expected, even if for a nominal 25 basis points?

And what if that action is followed through by a rash of easing by the central banks of Japan, Taiwan and Indonesia, all of which have policy decisions on Sept 19, just a day after the Fed’s?

Will gold longs reach for the stars then? Or will they be content to just land on the tree tops?

Two Schools Of Thought/h3

There are two schools of thought on the direction for the world’s favorite safe haven.

One is that the gold rally has reached exhaustion point, meaning there will be fewer of the kind of outsize gains seen over the past four months. Even if there are, those advances are likely to be returned quickly.

The other is that longs in the precious metal are virtually unstoppable, and could, if the stars align, rewrite the 2011 record high of above $1,900 per ounce.