Gold (XAU/USD) retreats below $1,800, easing to $1,781 amid Monday’s initial Asian session, following the heaviest daily run-up in over two weeks.
The yellow metal cheered a surprise drop in the US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) data for November, 220K versus 550K forecast, the previous day. However, However, a 0.4% fall in Unemployment Rate to 4.2% and Average Hourly Earnings matched the 4.8% YoY forecast. Following the data, the US dollar offered a knee-jerk reaction before resuming the north-run as Fed fund futures rallied.
The odds of the Fed rate hike earlier got fuelled by comments from St Louis Fed President James Bullard who is also a voting member in 2022. The policymakers said, “Could look at raising interest rates before completing the taper.”
Other than the Fed-linked chatters, the risk-off mood also took clues from the spread of the South African covid variant, dubbed as Omicron, as well as talks surrounding the US-China tussles. After initially hitting Europe and the UK, the virus strain tightens its grip towards reaching the key global nations like the US and China. It should be noted, however, that global scientists are optimistic over the cure. Recently, US top Medical Officer Anthony Fauci backed Pfizer’s drug to be effective against Omicron while the news of chewing gum to stop the virus spread and the UK’s push for treatment also keeps traders hopeful.
Elsewhere, news that China’s Premier Keqiang promised a Reserve Requirement Ratio (RRR) cut to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), without specifying the date, per the ANZ, also weigh on sentiment. On the same line were the recent headlines from the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) saying, “China wants to put its first Atlantic military base in Equatorial Guinea, U.S. intelligence shows. The prospect has set off alarm bells in Washington.”
Against this backdrop, Wall Street closed negative and the US 10-year Treasury yields slumped to the lowest since late September on Friday. That said, the S&P 500 Futures lick its wounds with 0.15% intraday gains at the latest.
Moving on, a light calendar and cautious sentiment ahead of next week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting may challenge gold price moves. Though, Friday’s US Consumer Price Index (CPI) for November will be crucial to watch, not to forget coronavirus headlines and central bank comments.
A four-month-old support line joined a softer-than-expected US NFP to trigger gold’s corrective pullback from the monthly low. However, bearish MACD signals and downbeat RSI line challenge the recovery moves below the key 200-DMA level surrounding $1,792.
While a clear upside past $1,792 will give a free hand to the gold buyers targeting the $1,800 threshold, a six-week hold horizontal area near $1,814-16 and a horizontal line comprising tops marked in July and September, surrounding $1,834, will test any further advances.
Meanwhile, a downside break of the stated support line from August, near $1,765, isn’t a green signal for the gold bears as 61.8% Fibonacci retracement (Fibo.) level of August-November upside and a two-week-old support line, close to $1,760-59 region, will challenge the south-run.
Should gold prices drop below $1,759, an extended fall towards September’s low of $1,721 can’t be ruled out.
Trend: Pullback expected
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