Chart Of The Day: Is Gold Finally Bottoming?

 | Dec 28, 2021 15:34

Though the S&P 500 yesterday scored its 69th record close for 2021, goldbugs might be more interested in a far less publicized event: gold has reached its highest level in five-and-a-half weeks.

Given that the Fed recently turned hawkish, the precious metal's rise is probably not the result of any dollar weakness. Indeed, the USD is within 1% of its 18-month high, which should be pressuring the yellow metal, not boosting it.

However the rapid spread of COVID's Omicron variant is likely causing investors to continue holding and acquiring safe haven assets, even as equities feed any remaining risk appetite. Gold, of course, is a classic haven. 

As well, gold's gains may be supported by its status as an inflation hedge, though we'd expect the yellow metal to lose some of its luster on that score as the Fed continues tightening fiscal policy, offsetting the need for any protection against inflation. But then inflation may soon be easing as well. This morning, Japan's November Industrial Production release came in at a record high level after carmakers were finally able to obtain long-awaited components as the supply chain snarl finally moderated, which could take the pressure of price increases and availability.

All of which looks good for gold fundamentals over the longer term—if it doesn't accelerate as the dollar loses buying power, it could still rise as a safe haven. From a technical perspective, it appears that demand will push the yellow metal higher.