Gold: Unloved Or Secretly Desired? Mystery Spikes Since Fed Hike

 | Oct 03, 2018 03:13

Just a week ago, it looked like a commodity nobody wanted, with fund managers bailing out and analysts all but prophesying its doom on the prospect of five more rate hikes in two years. Now, gold is back above the psychologically important $1,200 per ounce level, seemingly unaffected by the most hawkish Federal Reserve policy in a decade and one of Wall Street’s most breathtaking rallies in a year—factors not usually favorable to bullion.

In Tuesday’s session, a larger regional fallout over Rome's troubles.

h3 Outperforming The Dollar/h3

Even so, some analysts could not help express their wonder at gold’s ability, in recent days, to outperform the dollar, which stands to be the chief beneficiary of the Fed’s planned monetary tightening through 2020.

Rate increases and higher US bond yields dampen the appeal for gold, which offers no yield, unlike the dollar. A higher dollar also makes gold denominated in the greenback costlier for holders of other currencies.

“That gold’s not trading below $1,150 is, I believe, remarkable,” said Frank Holmes, CEO and chief investment officer of US Global Investors Inc, a boutique investment advisory firm in San Antonio, Texas, that recommends gold-linked stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) to investors.

Holmes wrote in a post on Monday that there was “a lot motivating the bears” in gold:

“Besides a stronger dollar and higher interest rate, stocks are still going strong, buoyed by record buybacks, and massive inflows into passive investment products.”

h3 Current Highs Still Behind April/h3

Despite its relative strength of late, gold is still down 7 percent on the year. For instance, its Wednesday start of above $1,211 an ounce in Asian trade pales to the 2018 high above $,1365 seen in April. The dollar, meanwhile, is up 3.4 percent on the year.