Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Gold Navigates Trade Winds And Technical Crosscurrents Amid Price Consolidation


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Gold markets balanced shifting trade dynamics and technical signals during the May 9 morning session, with spot prices hovering near $3,324 after a volatile week.

The metal's 26% year-to-date gain faced pressure from improving risk sentiment as U.S.-UK and U.S.-China trade developments tempered safe-haven demand, while stubborn inflation and geopolitical tensions provided underlying support.

Federal Reserve policy decisions anchored market psychology. The central bank held rates steady on May 8 but highlighted dual risks of persistent inflation and labor market fragility.

Chair Jerome Powell's dismissal of preemptive rate cuts initially boosted gold's appeal before rising Treasury yields triggered profit-taking. The 10-year yield's climb above 4.5% pressured non-interest-bearing bullion, though real yields remained negative when adjusted for core CPI at 4.8%.

Trade policy whipsawed prices. A U.S.-UK agreement eliminating steel/aluminum tariffs erased 1.7% from spot gold on May 8, while revived U.S.-China tariff talks slated for May 10-11 further dampened haven flows.



COMEX June futures slid 2.5% to $3,306 as equity markets rallied, though MCX contracts in Mumbai held firm at ₹96,307/10g thanks to rupee depreciation cushioning international declines.
Gold Outlook
Technical indicators flashed caution. MCX gold's bearish engulfing pattern on 15-minute charts tested critical support at ₹96,200, with the RSI (44) signaling waning momentum.

Globally, resistance at $3,425 capped upside attempts despite gold trading 15% above its 200-day moving average. Bollinger Band contraction on London spot prices indicated tightening volatility, while MACD histograms turned negative across major exchanges.

Fundamental drivers revealed split priorities. Central banks added 28.6 tons to reserves in April through aggressive purchases from Shanghai and Istanbul markets.

Retail investors meanwhile pulled $1.2 billion from North American ETFs despite Asian funds seeing record inflows. The physical market divergence highlighted gold's dual role as institutional inflation hedge and retail crisis buffer.

“Trade resolutions could temporarily cap prices, but debt markets and currency debasement fears lock in structural demand,” noted a Saxo Bank strategist.

Capital analysts observed leveraged funds reducing long positions by 12% this week while family offices increased allocation targets to 8% of portfolios. Critical support zones now loom at $3,305 (COMEX) and ₹95,600 (MCX), with resistance at $3,465 and ₹97,500.

Market makers report concentrated put options at $3,300 for May 10 expiry, suggesting institutional readiness to defend key levels. The CME Group's open interest data shows that 28% of contracts are held through December 2025.

This indicates long-term bullish positioning despite near-term market volatility. Gold's path hinges on weekend trade talks and Fed rhetoric, but its 2025 foundation remains firm.

Inflation-adjusted prices still trail 2024 peaks, while mining output constraints and central bank accumulation create supply-demand asymmetry.

Technical consolidation above $3,300 could set the stage for Q3 rallies as seasonal demand from Indian festivals and central bank rebalancing cycles converge.

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