Commodities Week Ahead: Gold Ails, Oil Perks Up Seeing 'Recovering' Trump

 | Oct 05, 2020 05:20

So, did markets get their knickers in a knot for nothing?

News that Donald Trump could be released in record time for a hospitalized COVID-19 patient, perhaps as early as Monday according to some reportshas got risk assets all pumped up and looking to significantly retrace Friday’s losses—making investors wonder if it was worth the pre-weekend stress they endured for a president known to thrive on optics.

“Despite the US Markit and ISM Services PMI reports, the focus will remain on Trump’s health updates and the resultant impact on the global markets,” FX Street said in a blog, after video messages from the president were posted on Twitter over the weekend, where he said he was reasonably well and also showed he'd left the Walter Reed National Medical Center on Sunday to wave at supporters from his limousine. 

Citigroup’s chief forex strategist in Japan, Osamu Takashima, said the president’s coronavirus infection may have reduced the chance of a contested outcome in the Nov. 3 election—and also the risk of a constitutional crisis in the event Trump’s challenger Joe Biden won.

Risk sentiment could rise in the coming days, Takashima said, adding: 

“Recent public opinion polls (are) indicating that Biden's support ratings are still above Trump—with a wide enough margin for a probable victory—and that isn't necessarily a bad thing.”

The Citi forex chief for Japan said Biden was seen “as a pragmatist and that his policies may not necessarily be negative for markets.”

Politico, meanwhile, reported that Vice President Mike Pence will travel to Utah on Monday as he plays the Trump campaign’s lead act for the foreseeable future—the highest-profile surrogate for the president’s re-election at a time when both men can least afford another setback following Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis.

On the commodities front, as the Asian window for gold trading waded past early afternoon Monday in Singapore, both bullion and futures of the yellow metal tumbled under the key $1,900-an-ounce level it held on Friday.