Gold (XAU/USD) licks wounds near $1,860 during the first negative day in eight amid early Monday. In doing so, the yellow metal eases from the highest levels since June while stepping back from the yearly resistance line. That said, the pullback moves fail to cheer softer US Treasury yields, as well as the US dollar, amid mixed sentiment.
The US Dollar Index (DXY) drops 0.11% intraday while extending Friday’s pullback from the highest levels since July 2020. Helping the greenback bears are the US 10-year Treasury yields that consolidate the previous week’s rebound, down three basis points (bps) to 1.55% at the latest. On the same line is the mildly positive market sentiment that reduces gold’s safe-haven demand.
Behind the market’s moves are the mixed concerns over the US stimulus and inflation, as well as the Fed rate hike following Friday’s surprisingly downbeat Michigan Consumer Sentiment data that slumped to a 10-year low. Additionally, the recent comments from US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari, coupled with the hopes of the US-China phase 1 deal, also favor the mood.
While US Treasury Secretary Yellen defied chatters that the incoming stimulus will fuel more inflation, Fed’s Kashkari reiterate that the inflation run-up is ‘transitory’. Further, the Financial Times (FT) cited familiar sources to say, “US President Joe Biden and China’s President Xi Jinping will discuss ways to prevent tensions from spiraling into conflict, in the face of rising concern about Taiwan and Beijing’s nuclear arsenal.”
Looking forward, US Retail Sales for October, expected to keep 0.7% MoM growth on Tuesday, will be the key catalysts to watch for near-term direction. Also important will be the US-China talks and the US aid package progress. Should the reflation fears recede, as they are now, gold may witness the much-awaited pullback.
Gold managed to cross an important descending trend line resistance from August 2020 and a four-month-old horizontal hurdle during the biggest weekly run-up since May. However, overbought RSI conditions probe the bulls around a downward sloping trend line from January near $1,870.
Adding to the upside filters are the tops marked during late January 2021 around $1,875-76, a break of which could propel the quote towards breaking the $1,900 threshold, as well as target June’s high close to $1,917.
Meanwhile, pullback moves may aim for a $1,834 re-test but remain less challenging until marking a daily close below the broad resistance line, now support around $1,827.
If at all the gold bears manage to conquer the $1,827 resistance-turned-support, a confluence of the 100-DMA and 200-DMA, surrounding $1,790, will be in focus.
Trend: Further weakness expected
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