Monthly Gold
Outlook- July 2022
June was quite
volatile with the push and pull of macroeconomic factors driving the prices of
all asset classes. International gold prices fell by -1.6% m/m to close at $1,807
but held above $1,800 throughout the month on the back of macroeconomic and
geopolitical uncertainty. The prices touched a high of $1,879 in the middle of
the month after a knee-jerk reaction to the unexpectedly high US CPI numbers that
touched 8.6% y/y in May. This was the third consecutive month where the
inflation was more than 8% and the 15th month where the inflation
numbers have stayed significantly above the threshold of the Fed’s 2% target
rate. With inflation running high, investors started anticipating a faster pace
of liquidity tightening and rate hikes which caused a swift correction in gold
prices to $1,800 levels.
In the June FOMC
meeting, the Federal Reserve increased the Fed funds rate by 75 bps to 1.5%,
the largest increase in 28 years. The Fed Chair further indicated that there
would be rate hikes of equal quantum, if necessary, to curb the rising
inflation. This drastically changed the interest rate projections. Before the
Fed meeting, February 2023 Fed Funds rates were projected to be less than 3%,
which went up to 3.45% after the FOMC statement.
The aggressive
tightening of the monetary policy led to a marginal fall in gold prices.
However, the drawdown in the asset prices was more pronounced in equities and
bonds. The S&P 500 fell by more than 9% last month taking the YTD fall to
more than 20%, which is regarded as a bear market territory. On the other hand,
a heavy selloff in the bond market was visible with the US 10Y nominal yield
nearing 3.5% during mid-June, the highest after 2011. This led to the US 10Y
TIPS yield touching 0.89%, the highest since February 2019. The rising yields
propelled the flight of money to the US Dollar. The DXY, an index that compares
the US dollar with a basket of currencies, jumped to a 20-year high of 105. A
stronger dollar and positive real yields had a bearing on gold prices. However,
the downside was capped because of risk aversion and a selloff in equities,
persistent price pressures, and the geopolitical risk premium due to the
Russia-Ukraine war.
That said, after
the Fed’s extreme hawkish commentary, the recessionary concerns kicked in as
investors feared the rate hikes could crash land the economy. The concern was
evident in oil prices, which corrected by 6% in a month. Overall commodity
prices also fell in June with the CRB Commodity index falling by 7% in a month.
Fears of a slowdown were also reflected in the cooling of inflation
expectations in the US and investors rushing into Treasury bonds. US 10Y
nominal yield and US 10Y TIPS yield ended the month lower at 3.10% and 0.74% respectively.
Looking ahead,
we expect gold prices to be rangebound and volatile in the short term as top
central banks prioritize fighting inflation over growth, with another 75 bps rate
hike expected in the US in July. However, in the medium to long term, we expect
significant tailwinds to the gold price given that the global economic growth
is expected to slow down meaningfully. The IMF has slashed the US GDP growth
forecast to 2.9% from 3.7% in 2022. And when the US sneezes, the rest of the
world catches a cold. An economic slowdown might compel the Central Banks,
especially the Fed, to cut interest rates or reduce the quantum of hikes and
abandon balance sheet reduction i.e pulling out liquidity. This would be a
pivot from the current aggressiveness, pushing gold prices up. But given that the
price increases are caused due to external shocks, there may be limits to
monetary policy’s effectiveness. There is a likelihood that the global economy
could enter several years of above-average inflation and below-average growth.
This stagflationary environment, if materialised, will have destabilizing
consequences for the global economy and markets, supporting investment demand
for gold.
On the domestic
front, INR depreciated by nearly 2% last month supporting the rupee gold price.
Gold in the domestic market was flat m/m but up by 5% YTD. This is a massive
outperformance compared to Nifty which is down 9% YTD. The positive sentiment
with regard to gold was visible in ETF flows which were robust in May. While
there was a net outflow globally, Indian gold ETFs recorded a net inflow of 200
crores in May countering global trends. Moving into July, the basic import duty
on gold was hiked from 7.5% to 12.5% in a bid to temper imports of the metal. The
immediate result of this move would be higher domestic prices.
Gold demand as
an investment is gaining traction lately given investors have realised the
relevance of holding gold in the portfolio in uncertain and volatile times. The
benefit of currency depreciation along with the strong fundamentals of gold
make it an excellent portfolio component to withstand volatility in the equity
and bond markets, as well as whatever surprises are in store for the global
economy going forward. Moreover, with efficient and convenient products such as
Gold ETFs, it becomes easier to gain exposure to this important element of any
Indian investor portfolio.
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article has been prepared on the basis of publicly available information,
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