- Joined
- 17 August 2006
- Posts
- 7,927
- Reactions
- 8,655
Well a strong move is on this early Sat morning.
Your wish was granted, with a race to yet another recent high kicking off trading- do we call it a Trumped up charge?Gold price $1526 ish on close so looking for my gold miners to recover Monday hopefully (heaven forbid) the Donald keeps tweeting
Gold has been bouncing around off its 30 day low this week and might just end closing a touch higher than it began:
View attachment 97397
This is exactly what the doctor ordered, imho, as its trading channel is intact, suggesting its rise to $1600 is unlikely to be as volatile as it looked a week ago.
Regularly posting on POG can be a bit of a waste of time given how long it can take to decisively go in any particular direction. But these are not ordinary times.
We have never before had a "trade war" of such proportions, concurrent with an unsettled Europe and sabre rattling on the oil front. We also have some central bank interest rates in the negatives, while Trump is pressuring the Federal Reserve to cut deeply.
How long these issues will take to resolve themselves is anyone's guess, but at the very best a Brexit outcome would be 31 October. That, however, will cause its own economic tumult until a semblance of order appears - so we are looking into next year!
Speaking of Central Banks, they have been diversifying out of US dollars and into gold in a big way, and it's hard seeing that trend falling away in the present global climate.
On the trade war front it's difficult to see Trump backing down until the so called big end of town tells him that his tariffs are disproportionately affecting US businesses. We already know consumers have been hit, but Trump never feels their pain, so they do not count.
Onwards we go....
....
The past week proved interesting for two reasons:
Both these issues are behind us now. However each casts a longer shadow, and these are supportive of gold rallying rather than declining.
- The strike on Aramco's oil production facility led to POG increasing a measly percentage point, and
- The Fed rate drop actually led to POG immediately declining.
In the first case, it shows how fragile oil facilities are and the potential for damage to severely affect global markets. And that's aside from the political posturing over Middle East issues that continue to fuel the fires.
Meanwhile the Fed decision means big money needs a safer home than banks and bonds.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?