Gold (XAU/USD) extends its recovery into a fourth day on Thursday, rising up into the $2,670s during the European session. An overall risk-off tone to markets due to disappointment at Nvidia’s results is weaning investors off stocks and catalyzing safe-haven flows into Gold.
Thursday’s mildly weaker US Dollar (USD) is a further tailwind for Gold since it is mostly priced and traded in USD. Continued haven flows from geopolitical fears relating to Russia’s lowering of the threshold for using nuclear weapons is another factor.
Capping gains for the precious metal, however, is competition from Bitcoin (BTC). According to Bloomberg News, a surge in Bitcoin Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) inflows in November – ETFs enable investors to own shares that track BTC’s price rather than owning the asset itself – has coincided with a similar surge in outflows from Gold ETFs. This suggests a direct pivot away from owning Gold and into Bitcoin.
Gold is pushing higher on Thursday after the third quarter earnings release from Nvidia triggered a decline in stock markets. Although Nvidia’s Q3 earnings beat estimates and were initially met with euphoria, the stock itself slumped 3.0% following the release.
The unintuitive response was put down to the results not quite being good enough to match “the sky-high expectations for the AI colossus,” according to Forbes. The overall risk-off tone left in the wake of the disappointment led to a broad decline in investor sentiment, which for Gold and other safe-haven assets was positive news.
The US Dollar (USD), meanwhile, is edging slightly lower after surging on Wednesday. The Greenback appears to have been stopped in its tracks by commentary from Federal Reserve (Fed) speakers suggesting the Fed should push ahead with its plan to cut interest rates amid falling inflation. This goes surprisingly against the widespread view that inflation will rise under a Trump presidency.
Bank of New York President John Williams said he “sees inflation cooling and interest rates falling further,” in an interview with Barron's on Thursday. This followed similar comments from Federal Reserve Bank of Boston President Susan Collins, who said on Wednesday that more interest-rate cuts are needed, but policymakers should proceed carefully.
Gold rises for the fourth consecutive day and paints a bullish “Three White Soldiers” Japanese candlestick pattern (green rectangle on the chart below) from last week’s lows.
Gold has broken clearly back above a major long-term trendline and is attempting to break above the (red) 50-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at $2,661. These are bullish signs.
The precious metal’s short-term trend is bullish, and given the maxim that “the trend is your friend,” the odds favor a continuation higher. The next target to the upside lies at $2,686, the September 26 high.
That said, the precious metal is in a downtrend on a medium-term trend, raising risks for the outlook. It is in an uptrend on a long-term basis, however, which supports the bullish shorter-term view.
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