Gold Bulls Eye Weaker USD After 2-Month Drought In Record Highs

 | Sep 29, 2020 16:10

It’s been nearly two months since gold bulls said goodbye to the dizzying record highs in the yellow metal. After various failed starts, hopes are rising again that a tumble in the dollar could provide gold with an opportunity to return and stay at the $2,000 an ounce level.

This week financial markets will be closely watching two events. First, tonight’s debate between Republican President Donald Trump and his Democratic challenger Joe Biden, ahead of the November 3 face-off for the 2020 U.S. election. Then on Friday, U.S. jobs data for August, when nonfarm payrolls are reported.

Neither will be a game changer to the longer-term outlook for gold and the dollar. But the effect they will have on the equity, bond and forex markets, and the broader macro space, could result in sizable impact for the shiny metal and its nemesis, the greenback.

Beyond these two events, there are hopes that Republicans aligned to Trump will reach an agreement soon with their rivals in the Democrat-led Congress for a new COVID-19 stimulus package—it has been a political football in Congress for the past three months. 

“Something has to give,” James Hyerczyk, who blogs on gold, said in a post on the FX Empire site on Tuesday. “We can’t have speculators dumping gold and still holding record short positions in the U.S. Dollar.” 

Gold last hit record highs on Aug, 7, when the spot price, which tracks bullion, touched $2,703 an ounce, amid a $2,089 peak for futures traded on New York’s COMEX.

The yellow metal’s next dalliance at $2,000 came almost two weeks later—between Aug. 17 and 18. Notwithstanding that, it has been trading in ranges of $1,980-$1,960; $1,960-$1,930 and $1,930-$1,900.

This week, the threshold went lower, slipping from $1,900 to as low as $1,849.