Gold to trade sideways to bearish next week; investors should wait before taking long positions By Bhavik Patel Gold is bouncing from the lows of $1800 but the overall trend still is bearish. Small bounce might be because gold prices are trading near an oversold region but investors are reluctant to take long positions when fundamentals point to lower prices. Rally in US dollar and treasury yields are providing a lid to gold prices. The entire premium from the war between Russia and Ukraine has been eroded away and even if conflict worsens, we may not see any spike in prices as investors are focused on inflation and higher interest rates. The US Fed is focused on bringing inflation down even if the US economy struggles. One of the reasons why gold and silver have seen significant selling pressure in the last four weeks is because investors have faith that central banks can engineer a soft landing that will weaken the economy enough to slow-growing inflation pressures but not enough to push it into a recession. But reality is with rising interest rates, there will be recession as the economy was up because of stimulus and there is more pain down the line. Ground reality is the world economy is struggling because of high crude oil prices. We believe long term, the US Treasury will be best performing asset followed by gold. In MCX, weak INR has given some support to gold prices but still it is struggling to stay above 50000 levels. RSI_14 is at 40 after bouncing from the lows of 36 but in COMEX, RSI_14 traded at the oversold region of 30 before bouncing back. Prices are under the 20 and 50 day moving average indicating the trend is bearish. 51000 is the resistance and 49000 is the support where the 200 day moving average is. Next week we expect prices to trade sideways to bearish. Investors should wait before taking long positions. Any bounce back will be weak and succumb to selling pressure. Reversal will only come above 51500 levels. (Bhavik Patel, Commodity & Currency analyst, Tradebulls Securities. Views expressed are the author’s own.)
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FII and DII trades: Foreign Institutional Investors (FII) have been net buyers of domestic stocks for successive days now. On Wednesday, FIIs pumped in Rs 2,347 crore. Domestic Institutional Investors (DII) have been net sellers, pulling out Rs 510 crore yesterday.
IPO watch: Syrma SGS Technology enters the final day of bidding today. So far the issue, that opened last week, has been subscribed 2.27 times. Retail investors have subscribed their portion 2.66 times while NIIs have bid for their quota 3.58 times and QIB portion has been bid for 0.71 times.
However, that doesn’t take into account the fact that geopolitical tensions on the Middle East are undeniably rising again which will mean limited downside.”
In the U.S., oil drilling rigs were up by one at 501 last week, Baker Hughes said in its weekly report.JPMorgan forecasted 26 oil rigs to be added this year, most of them in the Permian during the first half of the year.
“The timing of drilling is paramount, as rig additions at the start of the year will contribute to 2H24 production growth,” the bank’s analysts said in a note.
“Despite an impressive 1 mbd of crude and condensate production growth in 2023, we expect 2024 supply to increase by only 400 kbd due to lower completions activity levels vs 2023.”