Silver Lining For Precious Metal

 | Aug 10, 2022 12:23

  • All eyes on U.S. CPI 
  • Precious metals have made post-nonfarm payroll highs
  • Silver’s hammer monthly candle off key long-term support suggests low might be in
  • Precious metals have been able to make new post-nonfarm payroll (NFP) highs at the start of this week, which is something you would not expect to see given how the likes of the USD/JPY and government bonds reacted on Friday.

    The fact that gold and silver have expanded their recent gains (albeit off their weekly highs at the time of writing), suggests that the jobs report has not materially impacted the market’s view that the U.S. Federal Reserve will slow the interest rate hikes before going in reverse in 2023. 

    Perhaps the market is waiting to see how strong or otherwise July’s core inflation print will be today. But if the NFP report is anything to go by, we may well see investors buy any CPI-related dip in gold and especially silver. 

    How will CPI impact gold and silver?/h2

    I reckon a small beat on headline CPI will not lead to a big rise in the dollar, for as long as it eases from the 9.1% annual inflation print we saw in June. Analysts expect it to have eased to 8.7% in July.

    Core CPI is seen rising to 6.1% in July from 5.9% in June. For as long as core CPI is around the expected figure, or better still sharply lower, precious metals could potentially end the day higher.

    It is worth mentioning that the next Fed meeting is around 6 weeks away. So, the market will not put too much emphasis on a very small beat. However, if inflation proves to be too hot then it is difficult to remain bullish on metals in the short-term outlook, especially with both gold and silver testing some key technical levels.

    Silver in bullish channel/h2

    After a nice recovery in the latter parts of July, silver started August with some bullish momentum. However, it has now retreated a little after reaching a key resistance level around $20.60ish, which had been support on a couple of occasions earlier this year before prices dropped. The so-far small pullback from this area leaves some question marks about the directional bias.