Chart Of The Day: Gold Sliding Toward $1,250 On U.S. Dollar Strength

 | May 21, 2018 10:01

In a shining example of how the financial markets are full of surprises even for those (ourselves included) who claim to understand them, the US dollar is now extremely bullish after having endured a very bearish outlook. To be fair, a bullish or bearish outlook hinges on which time-span a trader chooses, since different themes influence an asset over different time frames.

The dollar is set to drop 5 percent by the end of the year, as investor focus returns to deteriorating US twin deficits—fiscal and current account. Today is also the second day of declines for US 10-year yields, though as of this writing they're once again pointing a bit higher, leading traders to believe that bond yields could be running out of steam. This would be an appropriate time to remind readers that we have been bullish on yields even after they stalled between April 26-May 14, for 12 sessions. Thus a two-day stall has very little predictive value.

Another point on which to be pessimistic is the growing perception that US has become an unreliable trading partner with an unpredictable president at the helm. This view may incentivize countries to begin importing from more predictable countries, steering demand away from the dollar.

h3 Dollar Rising; Euro, Pound Struggling/h3

However, at least for the moment, the dollar is the currency to have in hand, after the trade war—which has been its biggest headwind—is seen to be lifting, at least for the time being. This has been compounded by the fact that the euro and pound are struggling with their own problems.

The pound is pressured ahead of UK data including CPI and a second reading of GDP on the backdrop of political instability. The euro is taking a hit from the Italian government's path to a coalition that would seek to follow Britain’s example and depart from the EU. The added Italian risk would lead Italian bond holders to sell off, adding pressure to the euro, whereas US Treasuries are an oasis of calm.

All this provides a bullish outlook for the dollar in the near to mid-term and therefore a bearish outlook for gold over the same period.