Gold rates stall near $2000 amid geopolitical tensions and resilient US economic data By Bhavik Patel After two weeks of strong rally, gold prices is consolidating as A) it is near to its resistance of $2000 in COMEX and B) strong USD and Treasury yields are hampering its rally and creating headwinds. Gross domestic product of the US increased at a 4.9% annualized rate last quarter, the fastest since the fourth quarter of 2021. It clearly illustrates the resilience of the US economy in light of the aggressive monetary policy of the Federal Reserve as they have raised its terminal benchmark rate to 5.25% from 0.25%. In the span of two weeks, gold has moved from oversold region to overbought zone. On October 5, gold in MCX was around 56,500 where momentum oscillator RSI_14 was at 27 showing in oversold region. We saw one way selling pressure from 59,400 to 56,500 and from 9th Oct, after Hamas attacked Israel, we saw one way rally from gold jumping from 56,900 to 61,100 while momentum oscillator RSI_14 jumping also to 71.50 clearly showing overbought zone. As we have mentioned that $2000 is proving to be strong resistance for gold and since gold is in overbought zone, we expect some profit booking to emerge. Currently the corrections are shallow indicating undertone to be bullish but we would recommend not to take any over leveraged position from current price and wait for some dip around 60,000 to go long via options in small quantities with expected target of 61,000 and stoploss of 59,500. (Bhavik Patel is a commodity and currency analyst at Tradebull Securities. Views expressed are the author’s own. Please consult your financial advisor before investing.)
Last Friday, WTI and Brent slid 3% after strong U.S. jobs data raised concerns that the Federal Reserve would keep raising interest rates, which in turn boosted the dollar. While recession fears dominated the market last week, on Sunday International Energy Agency (IEA) Executive Director Fatih Birol highlighted that China’s recovery remains a key driver for oil prices.
“If demand goes up very strongly, if the Chinese economy rebounds, then there will be a need, in my view, for the OPEC+ countries to look at their (output) policies,” Birol told Reuters on the sidelines of a conference in India.Price caps on Russian products took effect on Sunday, with the Group of Seven (G7), the European Union and Australia agreeing on caps of $100 per barrel on diesel and other products that trade at a premium to crude, and $45 per barrel for products that trade at a discount, such as fuel oil.
“For the moment, the market expects non-EU countries will increase imports of refined Russian crude, thus creating little disruption to overall supplies,” ANZ analysts said in a client note. “Nevertheless, OPEC’s continued constraint on supply should keep the market tight,” they said.