Gold May Need U.S. Political Solution If Technicals Fail To Restore Rally

 | Dec 01, 2020 09:30

Back in the summer, it was something investors could barely do without. Now, it’s something they can’t seem to run away from quickly enough.

In just four months, gold's fall from grace has been almost as breathtaking as its rise. As the global economy stuttered due to pandemic lockdowns, and the dollar and Treasury yields were battered by a gigantic US COVID-19 stimulus, gold was given a $400 or 25% boost between March and July that culminated in August’s all-time high of nearly $2,090 an ounce.

From there, in almost the exact same number of months, gold looks poised to return to where it was before it began its dizzying summer spiral. Driving it down this time is one potential COVID-19 vaccine development after another that have barely given long-only investors in the yellow metal a break. Adding to hedge fund and algorithm-driven liquidations is the selloff by Wall Street banks on the notion that a host of immunizations and therapeutics may actually bring the virus under control in a matter of months. 

At Monday’s settlement on New York’s Comex, gold for February delivery was down $7.20, or 0.4% at $1,780.90 an ounce. It earlier hit $1,767.40, a low not seen since June 19, when it sunk to an intraday bottom of $1,745.50.

For the month, the benchmark US gold futures contract lost $112.50, or 6%. It was the yellow metal’s worst ever month since November 2016, when it fell by 7%.

Technical chartists have posited multiple support and breakout ranges for gold since its collapse began in earnest three weeks ago, amid the rash of positive vaccine news. Yet, the shiny metal has gone through one level after another, with no real assurance of its comeback.

Gold Needs A Substantive US Stimulus; Will It Get One?/h2

If technicals don’t do it, the best thing to restore gold to its former glory will be another substantive US stimulus. Federal Reserve officials have been insisting for weeks that the US economy seriously needs more fiscal help, as do ordinary jobless Americans. The US central bank even pressed its case on Monday to continue with its COVID-19 lending program through Mar. 31, past the original Dec. 31 deadline. The European Central Bank is also expected to announce support measures later this month. 

But, of course, nothing would charge gold higher like another US Congress-authorized stimulus, similar to the one issued in March.

Then, Democrats in Congress and Senate Republicans aligned with President Donald Trump passed, in a bipartisan fashion, the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES). That $3 trillion bill provided grants and loans to US businesses and paycheck protection to qualifying citizens and permanent residents.

Since then, the two sides have been locked in a stalemate on a successive CARES package, arguing over the size of the next relief, as thousands of Americans, particularly those in the airlines sector, risk losing their jobs without further aid. The negotiations have been further complicated by Trump’s loss of the Nov. 3 presidential election to Democrat Joseph Biden, and the incumbent president’s refusal to work with his imminent successor.

On Monday, outgoing US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin suggested Congress use $455 billion in leftover funds from the original CARES as “targeted relief” for the economy, instead of undertaking another major fiscal effort. Democrats have said a stimulus of at least $2 trillion is needed this time.

Georgia Senate Runoffs Hold Key/h2

In order for President-elect Biden, who takes office on Jan. 20, to get a substantive fiscal package together, congressional Democrats need to secure a bipartisan deal with Senate Republicans—which might be close to impossible with the polarized state of the nation’s politics.

The other political solution would, of course, be the Biden administration taking control of the Senate—a situation possible if the Democrats win two run-off elections in the state of Georgia on Jan. 5. But as it stands, the outcome of those two races is a toss-up with no certainty on which side will prevail.

Rhona O'Connell, who heads EMEA and Asia market analysis for the StoneX Group, told the Platts energy markets service this week that Senate control will be the key for the next stimulus, adding, for both the economy and gold: 

"If the Democrats manage to take the Senate after the Georgia runoff then the taps will be turned on. If not then expect more wrangling and a slower pace of recovery."

Technicals Say Gold Must Not Drop Below $1,1768 At Any Cost/h2
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Barring a Democrat takeover of the Senate, what do technicals show for gold?