Gold Technical Report: Gold medium term trend continues to remain bearish after yesterday’s DOJI candle on the daily charts. The prices also fail to overcome the 1800 mark. The 50 DMA has already crossed below 200 DMA on daily charts. Any slippage down the nearest main bottom at $1676 will turn the Main trend negative. On the upside, the immediate resistance is the Psychological mark of 1800 and then 200 DMA and 50 DMA zone at $1833.Both, the Short term Stochastics Oscillator at 9 and RSI momentum below 26 are signaling short term oversold positions .
Silver Technical Report: Silver medium term trend is bearish after yesterday’s DOJI candle on the daily charts. The prices also continue to trade below threshold 20.00 on daily chart and after some value buying was overweighed by continuous selling pressure. On the upside, the major uptrend reversal will come only at 20 DMA zone at $20.66. Both, the Short term Stochastics Oscillator at 15 and RSI momentum below 25 are signaling short term oversold positions .
Fundamental Report: The Gold prices are continuing to trade in a narrow range now after testing their lowest level since late December, following a more than 2% plunge early this week. Despite the early setback, volume is on the light side as traders await key economic data as well as the release of the minutes of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s last monetary policy meeting. Also, the traders will try to take hint of the same from today’s NFP numbers. While Fed Chair Jerome Powell stressed that inflation is a top priority, the central bank has two mandates, the second being full employment. If labor markets shrink, there is room for looser policy. However, that will not necessarily bring the dollar down. June’s Nonfarm Payrolls will likely trigger more volatility than usual as uncertainty about the Fed’s rate hikes has risen – and as currency markets seem more sensitive than usual to every piece of economic news. If wages rise at a faster pace, it would boost the dollar, almost regardless of the headline Nonfarm Payrolls change. Yet that is not to say the main figure is unimportant, if anything the headlineNFP figure is returning to the fore. If the headline significantly misses estimates – 260,000 in June after 390,000 in May – then it would point to falling price pressures in the future. It would also shift priorities for the Fed.
The dollar has gained significant value over the last two weeks, however, longer term studies reveal that the dollar has been on an upward trajectory since the beginning of 2021 when the dollar index was fixed at 90. The dollar index compares the U.S. dollar to a basket of six major currencies. Today the dollar index gained 1.34% a total of 1.406 points and is currently fixed at 106.315. Although dollar strength has been growing over the last two years recently dollar strength accelerated satrting in March when the Federal Reserve began to raise interest rates for the first time since 2018. Since the March interest rate hike of ¼%, the Federal Reserve has raised its Fed Funds Rates from near zero to 1.5% – 1.75%. Over the last three FOMC meetings the Federal Reserve has raised its fed funds rate first by 25 basis points in March, 50 basis points in May, and 75 basis points in June. It is also anticipated that the Federal Reserve will raise rates another 75 basis points during the FOMC meeting at the end of this month. The rate hikes by the Federal Reserve have been in response to exceedingly high levels of inflation which continue to run at a 40-year high.
Gains are also being capped by a rise in the benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury yield and a steady U.S. Dollar. Higher rates make non-yielding gold a less-desirable investment, while a stronger greenback tends to weigh on foreign demand for dollar-denominated gold. Gold traders will be eyeing Friday’s U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls report this week. Government data on employment will give investors a small look at the strength of the labor market after 150 basis points of rate increases already delivered by the Fed. A weaker-than-expected jobs report could increase concerns of a potential recession. Although cheap prices are attracting some bargain hunters, most traders are more interested in the direction of U.S. interest rates and the U.S. Dollar. The Federal Reserve is controlling the overall direction of interest rates. It is expected to keep the upside pressure on rates in order to drive inflation lower. This is the primary factor weighing on gold prices. Increasing fears of a recession, however, are driving investors into the safe-haven U.S. Treasurys and the U.S. Dollar. The strong greenback is another reason for the drop in gold prices.