Gold Rally Dies Down As Indian Buying Dries Up, Fed Seen To Disappoint

 | Aug 20, 2019 16:45

Gold is at a crossroads, as both speculators, who’ve been chasing it higher, and consumers, who need to buy cheap, hit the pause button.

U.S. rating and research agency Fitch Solutions sees only gradual gains for the yellow metal, which has struggled in recent days to hold above the key $1,500 per ounce support.

Jewelers in India, the top gold consumer after China, face a bleak outlook, according to Bloomberg, as heavy import taxes, record high domestic prices, a lingering lending crisis among shadow banks, flooding and fading demand threaten to drag annual sales to three-year lows.

All this is happening during Jackson Hole week, the Federal Reserve’s annual gathering in Wyoming that helps formulate monetary policy, which in itself affects gold prices.

On Wednesday, ahead of the Wyoming event, the Fed will publish minutes of its July 30-31 meeting, where it cut rates for the first time in a decade.

The European Central Bank will also issue its July minutes this week, reporting on Thursday, a day after the Fed.

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A boon for gold would be hints of a rate cut that would add to the Fed’s 25-basis point reduction in July, or the ECB’s first easing in a long time.

After surging from under $1,300 in late May, gold’s rally has slowed, with investors waiting for more signs of central bank easing before committing to new long positions.

But Fitch Solutions doesn’t see such signs coming soon, not from Jackson Hole at least.

Said the forecaster in a note issued Monday:

“We expect that the market has turned too dovish on U.S. rates and a correction will take place in the coming months, which will take some upward momentum out of gold prices.”

In Tuesday’s Asian trading, benchmark U.S. gold futures on New York’s Comex were down again, extending their rout to a fourth straight day—the longest losing streak in the yellow metal since April.