Chart Of The Day: Why Gold Will Head Higher On USD Slide

 | Dec 05, 2017 10:02

by Pinchas Cohen

Yesterday we published a bearish analysis on the dollar, on the heels of the currency's anticlimactic response to the Senate passing tax legislation. The post elaborated on the argument that when good news fails to motivate investors, it bodes poorly for the asset. It suggests that either the good news is already priced in—in which case any bad news will surely push it down—or that there are other negative, unknown considerations. Our analysis suggested the greenback is likely to fall further.

h3 Gold's Negative USD Correlation/h3

Today's post is a mirror-image analysis for gold. There are two reasons gold has a negative correlation with the dollar.

First, it's priced in dollars. Therefore, a stronger USD makes gold more expensive and thus less attractive to buyers; a weaker dollar makes gold cheaper, providing a buying opportunity.

Second, the dollar is considered a risk asset (although, ironically, during global turmoil, such as the 2008 crash, it is considered a haven currency, as people have faith in its political stability and military might), while gold is the original safe haven asset.