Gold outlook – August 2022
The second half of 2022 got off to a
not-so-great start. Volatility continued in asset markets as investors reacted
to mixed economic data and attempted to guess the trajectory of inflation,
growth, and the Fed’s policy. International gold prices fell below $1,800 an
ounce to mid-$1,700 levels in the first two weeks of the month as a stronger
dollar created headwinds for the metal. The dollar was buoyed to near
two-decade highs due to the aggressive monetary tightening by the Fed compared
to its peers in Europe and other regions. Interest rate hikes shot up the US
bond yields, making it attractive for investors to lock in the higher interest
rates.
Past performance may or
may not be sustained in the future.
but still ended the month 2.3% lower. Domestic
gold prices, aided by a depreciating rupee, ended the month higher by 1.5%.
As anticipated, the Federal Reserve raised its
policy Fed Funds rate by 75 basis points taking it up to a range of 2.25%-2.50%.
This was a continuation of its aggressive price-fighting stance, after a
similar super-sized hike just last month, but was perceived as positive by
markets that were expecting a larger hike given the sustained high inflation
prints. The Federal Reserve indicated less hawkishness compared to the earlier aggressive
stand on the tightening. While there will still be rate hikes in the future,
the quantum of hikes would now be data-dependent given the uncertainty in the
economy. The aggressive rate hikes have already slowed down the economy as seen
in some of the indicators. Now the key question is whether the slowdown is
temporary or a sustained one. The primary challenge for central banks is to
curb inflation without causing degrowth.
Inflation expectations have also tapered in
the past few weeks. 5-year breakeven inflation rate, as captured by the spread
between nominal and inflation-indexed 5-year U.S. Treasury securities, is
currently at 2.67%, down from the mid-June peak of 3.5.
Past performance may or
may not be sustained in the future
and 8.6% in the Euro area in June. It would be
important to see the inflation readings in the coming months. While the CRB
commodity index has corrected 12% from mid-June, it is still up 25% YTD. On the
other hand, oil prices are still hovering above $100/barrel because of the tightness
in the energy markets.
The robust job market in the US has cooled off
in recent weeks. The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment
benefits has been steadily inching up since April with the number coming in at
256,000 for the week that ended July 23rd. The housing market, which
is a key indicator of the health of the economy, is showing signs of a slowdown
as affordability is hurt amid rising borrowing costs and material prices. New
home sales in the United States fell 8.1% from a month earlier to 590,000 in
June of 2022, the lowest since April 2020. Additionally, the yield curve, which
is the spread between 10Y-2Y nominal yields, is inverted and is at its lowest
point since 2000. Historically, a recession has followed a yield curve
inversion each time within 6 to 18 months. In fact, the U.S. economy
technically entered a recession by shrinking an annualized 0.9% in the quarter
ending June 2022, following a 1.6% drop in the March quarter. All these
indicators are increasingly pointing towards an economic slowdown. The IMF, in
its World Economic Update July 2022, revised global growth estimates downwards
to 3.2% in 2022 and 2.9% in 2023, 0.4 % and 0.7% lower respectively than
projected in April 2022.
The big question now is: Is it possible that
evidence of a slowing economy is weighing on the Federal Reserve and the
biggest rate hikes of this cycle are behind us? Investors currently see a 50
basis-point hike as the most likely outcome at the September meeting, according
to pricing in interest-rate futures contracts. We believe that going forward the
Fed will tighten less aggressively and try to support growth as much as they
can, given the inflationary pressures are starting to subside. This bodes well
for gold prices. However, there are still downside risks to our view. There is
a possibility that the Russia-Ukraine war will continue to put upward pressure
on oil and gas prices, especially during the winters. This could result in
higher inflation that would put the Federal Reserve in a fix. However, it is
highly likely that Fed will not tolerate any negative impact on growth and may
go soft on the tightening. In fact, the futures markets are implying rate cuts
in 2023. This will create tailwinds for gold again leading to repricing on the
upside.
That said, given the tremendous macro-economic
uncertainties that plague the future, it would be better to allocate to portfolio
diversifiers like gold and use the current consolidation in gold by accumulating
systematically to build one’s allocation. Gold should prove a better allocation
if inflation persists, geopolitical tensions escalate or if broad based slow
down manifests leading central banks to resort to their usual policy response
of adding liquidity and cutting rates, thereby effectively be geared to reduce
portfolio volatility.
Data Source : RBI , Bloomberg
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and reasonable as on date. Readers of this article should rely on
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