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Abstract:Gold prices inch towards inevitable upside or downside breakout, eyeing a speech from Fed Chair Jerome Powell and increasingly tense US-China trade talks, along with crude oil prices.
Gold & Crude Oil Talking Points:
Gold prices lose upside momentum with rally in US bond yields, S&P 500
Crude oil, gold eyeing Fed Chair Jerome Powell and US-China trade talks
XAU/USD inching closer towards inevitable breakout, be it higher or lower
Find out what retail traders gold buy and sell decisions say about the coming price trend!
Commodities Wrap
Gold prices lost upside momentum during the latter half of Wednesdays trading session, erasing what could have been a solid day for the precious metal. Weakness could be found by looking at US front-end government bond yields which rallied alongside the S&P 500 as risk aversion cooled, arguably resulting in a better-than-expected day on Wall Street.
Gold, lacking interest-bearing qualities, thus lost its appeal as an anti-fiat asset. The somewhat upbeat mood in stocks could be traced to hopes of an outcome in US-China trade talks by Friday which have recently taken a turn for the worst. Chinas delegation team, along with Vice Premier Lie He, are nevertheless scheduled to arrive in the US for negotiations.
Sentiment-linked crude oil prices, while rallying with the S&P 500, were little changed due to losses earlier in the day. Even an unexpected contraction in weekly EIA inventory flow (-3963k barrels versus +1112k expected) failed to offer the commodity enough upside support to pare prior declines.
US-China Trade Talks, Fed Chair Jerome Powell in Focus for Gold and Oil
Both the reaction in gold and crude oil prices could have been linked to the ongoing trade talks between the world‘s largest economies which are a critical sticking point for general market mood. In fact, oil weakened in early Thursday trade alongside the Nikkei 225 as US President Donald Trump said that China ’broke the deal.
Tension and updates between the two economic powerhouses are clouding the fundamental background in the near-term due to the risk of a breakdown in talks. Still, keep an eye on a speech from Fed Chair Jerome Powell over the remaining 24 hours. He may reiterate the central banks more neutral stance which last week resulted in brief risk aversion.
Crude Oil Technical Analysis
Crude oil prices are sitting under the rising support line from late December, struggling to find momentum in either direction. A narrow falling channel from the middle from April seems to be keeping the downside bias though. Immediate support appears to be at 60.26, the former highs in March. Climbing higher places 64.54 as the next psychological barrier.
Crude Oil Daily Chart
Gold Technical Analysis
The pullback in gold prices left behind a large wick after testing the descending resistance line from February. Overall, golds downtrend remains intact since the bearish Evening Star from its peak just under 1346.75. But, it is running out of room to consolidate with the rising support line from August 2018 just below it. Every day of trading brings it closer to a breakout, be it up or down.
XAU/USD Daily Chart
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
The Japanese Yen (JPY) strengthened against the US Dollar (USD) on Thursday, boosted by stronger-than-expected Q2 GDP growth in Japan, raising hopes for a BoJ rate hike. Despite this, the USD/JPY pair found support from higher US Treasury yields, though gains may be capped by expectations of a Fed rate cut in September.
Following fresh 2024 lows near 0.6350, AUD/USD bounced back above 0.6500 on Tuesday, returning to positive weekly territory. The pair remains focused on the 200-day SMA at 0.6592, with a negative bias expected below this level. The recovery was supported by rising copper and iron ore prices and a hawkish hold from the RBA.
The USD/JPY pair has rebounded to around 145.40 after dropping to its lowest level since January at 141.68, amid early Asian trading. The US Dollar's decline was driven by recession fears and expectations of significant Federal Reserve rate cuts. The rise in the US Unemployment Rate in July has heightened concerns about a recession, leading markets to anticipate rate cuts of 50 basis points in September and November, and an additional 25 basis points in December.
The aftermath of the Japanese yen's strengthening has manifested in significant dips across multiple markets, including equities, commodities, and various currencies. The yen has erased all its 2024 losses against the dollar, moving towards the 145.00 mark. The dollar index (DXY) has fallen to its lowest level since March, hovering above the $103 mark.