Recap..
Gold prices started May on a high with the background of pain in the US
banking sector leading to global risk aversion. Also supporting prices was the Fed policy at
the start of the month where the Fed chair hinted at flexibility and a
meeting-by-meeting approach which was considered dovish by markets. Markets were
pricing in a 90% chance of a pause in rate hikes in June policy and 3 rate cuts
in calendar year 2023 with the first one coming as soon as July. Markets were
being overly optimistic and had run up way too much. As expected, international
gold prices cooled off as the month progressed, ending the month 1.2% lower at
$1959 per ounce. In comparison, domestic gold prices closed the month flat,
aided by a depreciating rupee.
Weighing on gold prices was the US inflation data for April that showed
prices slightly decelerated but were sticky at elevated levels. US Consumer Price Index in April rose 4.9% on an annualized basis, down
from 5% in March. Meanwhile Core Consumer Price Index moved up by 5.5%
year-on-year, easing slightly from 5.6% in March. The Personal Consumption
Expenditures index, which is the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, increased
4.4% after advancing 4.2% in March.
US Employment data for April came in stronger than expected and was
another setback to gold prices. Non-farm payrolls data showed 2,53,000 jobs
were added in April, higher than 1,80,000 jobs expected. Average hourly
earnings too were higher than expectations, growing by 4.4% year-on-year. The
unemployment rate fell back to a more than 5-decade low of 3.4% from 3.5% last
month. Other
data released in the month like retail
sales, homebuilding and industrial production also indicated
healthy economic momentum and put downward pressure on gold prices. The S&P Global
flash US Composite PMI index came in at 54.5, the fourth consecutive reading
above 50 indicated private sector expansion.
Some Federal Reserve officials made hawkish comments during the month
which also weighed on market sentiment. All of these factors led to
a repricing of market expectations of rate cuts from the Federal Reserve coming
later rather than sooner. As of the last day of May, markets are still pricing
in a pause at the Fed’s next meeting in mid-June but are now pricing in a 25-basis
point hike in the July meeting. Markets have also pushed down the first rate
cut to November followed by another cut in December, a stark change in
expectations from the start of the month. This translated into a stronger
dollar, higher US yields and weaker gold prices. The US Dollar moved up from mid-101
levels at the start of the month to 104+ levels, closing the month ~2.5% higher.
Yields on US 10-year Treasury bonds moved up sharply from 3.4% to 3.7% levels by
the end of the month.
The
US Dollar and US Treasury Yields were further supported by the risk aversion
created due to the ongoing debt-ceiling negotiations in the US. Despite worries
related to a US default, investors still chose to park their money in the
country’s currency due to its safe haven status. Investors reluctant to hold
securities vulnerable to the risk of a default drove up yields on US Treasury
bonds. While there was intermittent volatility, markets mostly expected that a
deal would come through, raising the debt ceiling yet again as the US kicks the
debt can further down the road.
Looking ahead..
While
a “in principle” debt deal is now ready and chances of it getting passed and
the US avoiding a default is high, the new deal and the resulting cuts in
spending could add to recessionary pressures for an economy already
dealing with the most aggressive monetary policy tightening in decades and
tight credit conditions after the recent banking crisis. Once the debt ceiling
is increased, the US treasury will issue new Treasury bills to raise funds,
which will negatively impact financial system liquidity as well as drive yields
higher. This will be negative for risk assets after a temporary relief rally.
The Fed told markets that it will take a data-dependent approach to
future rate hikes during its May meeting. At its June meeting, the Fed is expected to
weigh the slower-than-expected progress on inflation and a resilient labor
market against tightening credit conditions. With regional US banks
showing signs of
stability, inflation still running hot and the debt deal coming through, the Fed
may choose to raise rates in June, which will be negative for gold in the near
term. On the other hand, if the Fed does pause in June, whether the pause will
be extended or temporary will depend on whether or not prices remain on a
sustained downward path. A pause would be positive for gold prices.
Over the medium term, the economic headroom for the Fed to keep raising
rates is limited. The chance of
a recession over the next year held steady at 65%,
according to Bloomberg’s survey of economists in May. The US 10year-2year yield
curve remains inverted. Markets are still expecting the Federal Reserve to cut
rates later this year. A rate cut will be preceded by deteriorating economic
conditions or financial instability, making the investment case for holding portfolio
diversifiers like gold strong.
Investors can use the current consolidation in prices to accumulate gold and build their long -term allocation.
No comments:
Post a Comment