Gold, U.S. Dollar: Where to After CPI?

 | Aug 09, 2023 09:34

After a brush with $2,000 at the start of August, gold futures are back at their tiring mid-to-lower $1,900 range. Spot gold, more closely followed than futures by some traders, is emerging from a one-month low beneath $1,922.

On the contrary, the Dollar Index has gone gung-ho before the release of last month’s inflation numbers, hitting five-week highs at 102.655.

What will become of the yellow metal and the U.S. currency if the July reading for the Consumer Price Index comes in as forecast or proves a little higher or lower?

CPI Outlook /h2

The United States is to release its latest reading for the CPI on Thursday, which will show how much further the Federal Reserve has to go with rate hikes.

A day before the CPI release, the U.S. will issue its July Producer Price Index data, with core producer prices expected to rise by 2.3% from a year earlier.

The CPI, which rose by 3.0% year-on-year in June for its smallest growth in two years, is expected to have seen a slightly more aggressive expansion of 3.3% in July. The Fed’s target remains just 2% per annum.

The Fed has identified runaway jobs growth and correspondingly higher wages — as well as trillions of dollars of relief spending over the 2020 coronavirus outbreak — as among the reasons for inflation hitting 40-year highs of more than 9% a year in June 2022.

While pandemic spending is over, jobs and wage growth have continued to fuel inflation, prompting the Fed to keep adding to interest rates.

Since March 2022, the central bank has hiked rates by 525 basis points from the previous 25. Its next rate decision is on September 20. 

A lower CPI reading would make Fed policymakers more likely to hold off raising interest rates at their September meeting after a quarter-percentage-point hike in July.

While June’s growth in U.S. jobs was encouragingly smaller compared with May’s expansion of 306,000, wages were still higher than what the central bank desired. 

Recently, Fed speakers have raised their hawkish ante, saying rates, already at a 22-year high, need to rise further as inflation remains above tolerable levels for average Americans. 

“We have made progress in lowering inflation over the past year, but inflation is still significantly above the FOMC's two percent target, and the labor market continues to be tight, with job openings still far exceeding the number of available workers,” Fed Governor Michelle Bowman said in a speech on Monday, referring to the policy-making Federal Open Market Committee of the central bank.

“I expect that additional increases will likely be needed to lower inflation to the FOMC's goal.”

U.S. Dollar Index and CPI/h2