Fed, Equities Block Gold’s Safe Haven Path; Arabica Remains On The Ropes

 | Jul 18, 2018 02:08

Gold is unlikely to reclaim its safe haven status from the dollar anytime soon as a relentlessly hawkish Federal Reserve and rallying US stocks turn up the throttle on the USD's strength, leaving no place for gold bugs to hide.

The same may be true for Arabica bulls, who enjoyed just a slight reprieve from selling early this week on worries of Brazilian oversupply. Since Monday’s spurt higher, prices of the coffee bean of choice for outlets such as Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) and Dunkin' Donuts (NASDAQ:DNKN) have fallen back and may remain down as the mighty dollar weighs on demand across commodities, said traders.

Conversely, oil could have its downside limited if weekly US inventories fall for a second straight week. Industry data on Tuesday suggested a US crude build for the week ended July 13. But if official stockpile numbers, due at 10:30 a.m. ET on Wednesday, show a decline, then prices could climb from 3-1/2-year lows. The US's West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude benchmark traded near $67 a barrel this week and the UK global oil gauge Brent traded under $72, pressured by a host of bearish fundamentals, including an apparent Trump Administration reversal on sanction conditions for Iranian oil. Some are betting on a crude price rebound by next quarter, with Goldman Sachs seeing Brent at $80 levels by fall.

h2 Gold’s Year-Low/h2

In gold, the front-month August futures contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s COMEX division hit a one-year low of $1,226.90 an ounce on Tuesday after US. Federal Reserve Chairman Jay Powell said in his semi-annual testimony to Congress that with the job market having strengthened and inflation meeting a 2% target, the "best way forward" was to continue raising rates.