Chart Of The Day: Why Gold's Sharp Drop Won't Necessarily Continue

 | Sep 24, 2020 15:55

Gold has been falling for a fourth straight day, losing over 5% during the current slump. It's the longest as well as sharpest drop for the precious metal since before the March bottom.

For the month of September thus far, the yellow metal is down 6.61%. That may seem surprising, given its position as a safe haven asset, which normally thrives when risk appetite falters, illustrated by the S&P 500 which is down 7.6% over the same period, on track for its worst September in 18 years.

There's one immediate catalyst for this unexpected development: gold has been suffering from the unlikely dollar rebound. The currency is up 2.5% this month, with multiple, conflicting themes claiming responsibility—the coronavirus risk-off, seen via equities, while some economic data has improved, even as the Fed’s Evans warned that the central bank might raise rates sooner than expected.

Does this mean that gold will necessarily continue to weaken? Not at all.

Rather, the dollar is up for the moment, but faces an exceptionally uncertain fundamental environment along with serious technical resistance which could cause it to return it to its medium-term decline. In addition, gold could decouple from the USD and recalibrate with equities, reclaiming its haven status once again.

The next move for gold is a complex trade, with multiple, even conflicting drivers. As such, we're hesitant to predict what the precious metal's next moves might be. Instead, we'll simply describe the technical scenarios and outline expectations.