Newmont Shares Likely To Benefit As Global Crisis Lifts Gold, Miners

 | Feb 22, 2022 10:55

  • A wedge pattern in gold is threatening to break higher
  • The long-term trend remains bullish - Economics and politics support a rising gold price
  • Gold miners offer leverage to the gold price
  • Newmont Corporation is a leading gold producer
  • Levels to watch in NEM shares
  • Gold was the first commodity to reach a new record high as the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic caused a flood of central bank liquidity and a tsunami of government stimulus.

    In 2021 and 2022, consumer and producer price indices rose to the highest level in over four decades as inflation erodes fiat currency’s pricing power.

    In 2022, copper, palladium, lumber, and a host of other commodities reached new record highs, and others moved to the highest prices in years. Gold experienced an inside year in 2021, as the price did not trade above or below the 2020 high and low.

    Gold is a hybrid as it is a metal and has a long history as a currency, making the yellow metal unique. Jewelry demand tends to absorb a substantial percentage of annual production.

    Meanwhile, central banks and governments own the precious metal and hold it as an integral part of their foreign currency reserves.

    The official sectors’ classification of gold validates its role in the global financial system, and they have been net buyers over the past years. After all, while governments can issue legal tender to their heart’s content, they can only increase the gold supply by extracting more metal from the earth’s crust.

    Newmont Goldcorp (NYSE:NEM) is a leading gold producer. NEM shares move higher or lower with the metal’s price.

    h2 A wedge pattern in gold is threatening to break higher/h2

    From a technical perspective, gold has been digesting the move to the August 2020 record high at $2,063 and consolidating over the past eighteen months. After reaching the all-time peak, the price corrected to a low of $1,673.30 per ounce in March 2021, an 18.9% decline. After reaching the March 2021 bottom, the price continued to make lower highs, but it also settled into a pattern of higher lows.