After ECB Hold, Gold Longs Wonder How Differently Fed Will Act

 | Jul 26, 2019 08:59

The saying is: “If you expect nothing, you can never be disappointed.”

Gold longs were more than a smidgen disappointed after the European Central Bank left interest rates unchanged on Thursday.

Market odds for a prompt ECB cut were never too high anyway, surpassing just 50% last week, and the rate reduction, if any, would have been 10 basis points. Therefore, expectations for immediate monetary easing in the euro zone were fairly low. Yet, the ECB rates decision was being watched closely across the world as the precursor for another action: A Federal Reserve cut.

Unease for Gold Bulls

The hesitance of Mario Draghi and his governing council to act now rather than later has undoubtedly caused some unease for gold bulls.

The ECB action doesn’t necessarily change the overwhelming expectation for the first U.S. rate cut in a decade when the Federal Open Market Committee meets on July 30-31.

But more important than what happens next Wednesday is what the market is expecting of the Fed in follow-through action in September and beyond. Here’s where the real disappointment could be, not just for gold traders but also the equities crowd which chased the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite to record highs on Wednesday, just ahead of the ECB decision.