Gold News

Gold Prices Hit 3-Week Lows as Dollar Gains, Euro Faces 'Contagion', World 'Fragile' on Trade War

GOLD PRICES fell to new 3-week lows in London on Tuesday, dropping below $1271 as the US Dollar held near multi-month highs and European stock markets rose, bucking yesterday's 'trade war' falls on Wall Street and Asia overnight. 
 
The US Commerce Department meantime gave Huawei a 90-day reprieve on ban President Trump announced last week, issuing a "temporary general license" to the Chinese tech giant so it can update support for existing smartphones and telecoms equipment ahead of a new 19 August deadline.
 
The UK gold price in Pounds per ounce slipped back below £1000 – a 14-month high when breached in December – as Sterling bounced from its weakest Dollar value since start-May as the Conservative Government of Theresa May prepared to try for the 4th time to get her Brexit deal with the European Union approved by Westminster.
 
China's Yuan also rallied, edging higher from Monday's new 2019 lows against the Dollar.
 
Together with solid Shanghai gold prices in Yuan terms, that extended the premium for gold bullion landed in the metal's No.1 consumer market to $12 per ounce over London quotes, almost 50% above the typical incentive for new imports.
 
Like the Pound the single currency Euro earlier fell near 3-week lows to the Dollar, dropping within 0.3 cents of late-April's 2-year lows beneath $1.1150.
 
Weak Eurozone GDP growth is due for confirmation in Wednesday's data, plus a 'dovish' speech is widely expected from European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi on Thursday.
 
May's activity reports from Europe's manufacturing sector are expected to show further contraction in Thursday's first-flash PMI surveys from the Markit data agency.
 
Chart of Euro/Dollar exchange rate vs. gold in US Dollars per ounce. Source: St.Louis Fed
 
Europe faces a possible return of its "debt crisis" warns Dr.Lars Feld, a member of the German Council of Economic Experts, with the worsening global trade war and slowdown in Germany risking "potential contagion" from the spending deficit plans of Italy's anti-establishment coalition government. 
 
Euro gold prices fell Tuesday however to 3-week lows beneath €1140 per ounce, down 4.0% from February's near 2-year top.
 
"Although some markets like developed market equities have begun recovering from May's trade war escalation, it's premature to extrapolate stability," reckon analysts at US investment bank J.P.Morgan, pointing to the Japanese Yen and gold as potential hedges which are currently "under-owned" by investors as the US Federal Reserve prepares to cut Dollar interest rates.
 
Betting on the Fed ending 2019 with its key rate at the current 2.50% ceiling has now shrunk below one-third of all speculative contracts according to data compiled by futures exchange the CME.
 
"The world is fragile," agrees Laurence Boone, chief economist at global think-tank the OECD in Washington, and "it is very difficult to be resilient to what has been happening on the trade side.
 
"Global growth has stabilised but remains weak as trade growth has fallen sharply."
 
Urging national governments to boost fiscal spending "where possible", the OECD's latest outlook warns that if the US and China impose the 25% tariffs threatened on each other's goods, US economic output will fall by 0.6% and China's by 0.8% over the next 2 years.
 
Chart of global trade growth, quarterly data. Source: OECD
 
US-listed automaker Ford (NYSE: F) says it's cutting 7,000 office staff worldwide to try and save $600m per year.
 
The UK's repeatedly-rescued British Steel is meantime set for liquidation unless it can secure £75m ($100m) it's asking from government, risking a total of 25,000 jobs including suppliers.
 
Silver on Tuesday extended the drop in gold prices, slipping beneath $14.40 per ounce for the first time since early December.
 
The platinum price erased the last of its prior 13.0% jump from March's lows, trading back down at $809.

Adrian Ash

Adrian Ash, BullionVault Gold News

Adrian Ash is director of research at BullionVault, the world-leading physical gold, silver and platinum market for private investors online. Formerly head of editorial at London's top publisher of private-investment advice, he was City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning from 2003 to 2008, and he has now been researching and writing daily analysis of precious metals and the wider financial markets for over 20 years. A frequent guest on BBC radio and television, Adrian is regularly quoted by the Financial Times, MarketWatch and many other respected news outlets, and his views from inside the bullion market have been sought by the Economist magazine, CNBC, Bloomberg, Germany's Handelsblatt and FAZ, plus Italy's Il Sole 24 Ore.

See the full archive of Adrian Ash articles on GoldNews.

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