Gold Seen Down Next 2 Months On More Hawkish Fed

 | Mar 23, 2022 05:30

Gold longs got the vindication they wanted when the yellow metal finally hit $2,000 an ounce two weeks ago, ending their 19-month long wait to recapture the level last seen during the COVID-19 crisis.

Now, they might have to wait another two months, or possibly longer, for bullion to have another shot at that level.

This is based on the super hawkish mood of Federal Reserve bankers—from Chairman Jerome Powell down—in plotting the most aggressive ramp-up in US interest rates in two decades to fight inflation, which is growing at its fastest in 40 years.

And gold has been slowly responding to the Fed’s ever-hawkish stance, falling from a Mar. 8 peak of $2,078.80 on New York’s COMEX futures to below $1,920 in Wednesday’s Asian trading window.

Anyone doubting the dark clouds gathering over the yellow metal just need to look at the US 10-year Treasury note, which has been showing renewed vigor in recent days, aiming for highs last visited in May 2019. The opposite paths taken by benchmark US Treasury yields and gold is legendary.