Gold Proves Haven Mettle, Sharing Stage Briefly With Dollar 

 | Oct 16, 2020 09:44

It didn’t rally but neither did it crash. 

Gold's relative strength in the last 24 hours—even as the dollar rose—illustrated what a haven ought to be:

A hedge that can stand on its own, even when it’s expected to go in the opposite direction to its rival.

Both bullion and futures of gold settled in the green zone for a second straight day on Thursday as a risk-off mood coursed through markets after a spike in German and Italian coronavirus cases, COVID-19 therapeutic delays, movement restrictions in France and U.K. and Brexit high drama.

If that isn’t enough, the din of confusion continued over what the White House wanted for a new COVID-19 relief deal. 

Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin hinted at a modest and “targeted” package, suggesting that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi move some $300 billion of previously allotted money to needy Americans. President Donald Trump, standing for re-election in under three weeks, again floated a $1.8 trillion package, while rambling that he might even do more than the $2.2 trillion proposed by Pelosi. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, meanwhile, said he could only get votes for a $500 billion deal.

The myriad of uncertainties was the perfect recipe for a gold rally. 

Yet U.S. gold for December delivery settled up just $1.60, or 0.1%, at $1,908.90 an ounce on New York’s COMEX. On Wednesday, December gold rose 0.7%, recovering some ground after a 1.8% plunge the previous day.