Gold, Lost Amid Oil’s Mega Rally, Could Flounder After Fed

 | Sep 17, 2019 08:50

As the world’s attention was riveted to the super rally in oil on Monday, investors in gold were left to their own devices, fumbling with little direction on the geopolitical premium appropriate for the safe-haven asset after the historic drone attacks on Saudi Arabian oil fields.

In the end, bullion and futures of gold both added less than 1% each to cross the finish line at just slightly over $1,500 an ounce. Crude oil benchmarks WTI and Brent, meanwhile, jumped about 14% each.

Gold Clueless Again As Fed Looms/h2

In Tuesday’s early hours in Asia, it was back to anemic trading for gold, as traders remained nonplussed on how to continue pricing the yellow metal in the aftermath of the attacks and ahead of what would be an even bigger event for investors — the Federal Reserve policy decision on Wednesday.

To be fair, gold’s clueless state now has as much to do with the hyper uncertainties in oil. While oil bulls and bears both agreed that the path of least resistance for crude in the immediate term was up, without clarity from Saudi officials on the exact turnaround time for the output halted in Saturday’s attacks, it was nigh on impossible to say if oil prices should continue rising when they might have to drop instead. Indeed, WTI and Brent both retreated in Tuesday’s trade.

Very Little Of June-August “Charm” Left/h2

But leaving the influence of oil aside, since the start of this month gold has shown very little of its “June-August charm” which effortlessly took it to six-year highs and seemed at one point even ready to carry it beyond $1,600. Bullion is up about 17% on the year, with virtually all of it coming from the June-August stretch.

In a column a few days back, I asked if the longs in gold will be ready to reach for the stars if the Fed cuts rates again on Sept. 18. Or will they be content to just land on the tree-tops?

If this week’s activity is any indication, then tree-tops is the answer for now.