Gold (XAUUSD:CUR) concluded the trading year 2023 with a closing price of USD 2,063, marking an increase of approximately USD 240 or 13.1% over the course of last year. Particularly beneficial for this overall strong performance were the last two weeks of December when, following the FOMC meeting on December 13th, gold prices quickly recovered from USD 1,973 to USD 2,088.
However, since reaching these highs, prices initially pulled back sharply, before closing last Friday at USD 2,046. Despite the rebound in the second half of December as well as over the last two days, gold and the entire precious metals sector remain in a corrective phase, which started on December 4th with the new all-time high at USD 2,149.
Back then, the bears managed to release the built-up pressure in the gold market with a price spike to USD 2,149, initially alleviating it, but subsequently creating a negative chart pattern with a deep retracement on that same day of the new all-time high. Only at significant lower levels, the gold market found solid ground again at USD 1,973 on December 13th.
While this “wild” price action hasn’t completely obliterated the bullish outlook in the gold market, the beginning of the year 2024 has proven to be somewhat bumpy and corrective. The most recent attempt to break through the old all-time high at USD 2,075 has failed, and gold prices were pushed down to Thursday’s low of USD 2,013.
The main drivers in 2024 will be inflation, interest rates, and geopolitics
From a fundamental perspective, the gold market’s trajectory in the current trading year will likely depend on developments in central bank interest rates (particularly related to the risk of a recession) and the geopolitical situation.
On the interest rate front, financial markets are currently pricing in five to six U.S. interest rate cuts, which would potentially bring the Fed Funds Rate down to approximately 3.75% to 4.00%. Consequently, yields on 10-year U.S. Treasury bonds have decreased by almost 25%, dropping from around 5% to 3.78% within just two months since October 23rd. Such a high volatility in bond markets is rare and could prompt some institutional investors to increase their allocation to the safe haven of gold.
Inverted US yield curve forecasts a recession
Lower interest rates and a consequently weaker U.S. dollar would be beneficial for the gold price, of course. However, the Federal Reserve is likely to make such significant rate cuts only if there is a genuine risk of a severe recession and a substantial decline in stock prices. The current yield curve spread between the 10-year and 3-year U.S. Treasury bonds indicates this possibility. Historically, whenever this yield curve inverted and turned negative, a recession followed. If it happens again this time, gold and silver (XAGUSD:CUR) prices, along with beleaguered mining stocks (GDX & GDXJ), may experience a more than noteworthy moment due to the necessary interest rate cuts.
Geopolitically, the already complex situation has intensified since the brutal Hamas invasion in Israel. However, critical voices against Israel have been increasing, with the South African government filing a genocide lawsuit against Israel at the International Court of Justice on December 29th. The duration of the Arab world’s passive observation of the events in the Gaza Strip is difficult to estimate.
The Red Sea’s inflation threat
Meanwhile, in Yemen, Iran-supported Houthi rebels have expressed solidarity with the radical-Islamic Hamas in the Gaza Strip and repeatedly attacked container ships off their controlled coast. Hence, shipping companies such as Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd (OTCPK:HPGLY) avoid the Red Sea. Consequently, freight rates have surged, and travel times have extended by approximately seven to 20 days. Due to the disruption in its supply chain, electric car manufacturer Tesla (TSLA) had to halt production in Grünheide near Berlin for two weeks starting at the end of January.
After the British-American air strike against Houthi targets in Yemen early Friday, the Houthis have pledged a big response. As about one-third of global container freight is shipped through the Egyptian Suez Canal and the Red Sea, further Houthi attacks could lead to new inflationary pressures or shortages due to supply chain disruptions. I believe this geopolitical development contrasts with the expectations of interest rate cuts and doesn’t account for a potential escalation of the situation.
According to the latest figures, the overall U.S. inflation has already risen to 3.4% year-on-year, higher than anticipated.
In the election year 2024, the U.S. government cannot afford escalation in the Middle East, Ukraine, or Taiwan, nor can it afford a recession in the U.S. economy. On the other hand, I believe the Eastern bloc comprising China, Russia, and Iran will exploit any weakness in the U.S. The delicate balance between high interest rates and inflation control on one side and a weakening or recessive U.S. economic development on the other will continue to pose huge challenges for the Federal Reserve Bank. In this highly complex setup, Gold will most likely act like the canary in the coal mine. As I previously mention in an article on Medium titled “January 13th, 2024, Gold — Pullback almost done.“:
It’s notable that the gold price consistently gains a few U.S. dollars almost every night during the in Asian trading session, while it is often trimmed back after 14:20 UTC in Western paper markets.
Gold in US-Dollar – Initially sideways between approx. USD 2,000 and USD 2,075
On the daily chart, the repeated attempts to return to the broken trendline failed most recently on December 29th. Since then, the gold price has dropped from USD 2,088 down to USD 2,013. This pullback has pushed the daily stochastic oscillator into the oversold zone, increasing the likelihood of a new rally or at least a strong bounce, which we got over the last two days already.
The lower Bollinger Band (USD 2,011) was narrowly missed on Thursday, along with the psychological mark of USD 2,000. However, the 50-day moving average (USD 2,014) acted as support and a springboard, allowing gold to rally back to USD 2,062 during Friday before settling at USD 2,049.
Even if this low at USD 2,013 would be retested in the coming days or weeks, bears would have very limited space to the downside. In the worst case, gold is expected to find support, at the former downtrend line in the range between USD 1,980 and USD 1,985 during January. Alternatively, bulls may have already initiated their next attempt towards the former all-time high at USD 2,075 from the support zone between USD 2,000 and USD 2,015 last Thursday.
However, the upside is also full of resistances. The upper Bollinger Band (USD 2,074) aligns with the old all-time high. Additionally, the downtrend of the past two weeks hovers around USD 2,050 and has held on to Friday’s close.
Overall, the gold price has retraced significantly, offering entry opportunities once again. With favorable seasonality until the end of February and the continued weakness of the U.S. dollar, a renewed rally to at least USD 2,075 to USD 2,100 and beyond is the most probable scenario as of now. Much higher targets are already activated, too.
Conclusion: Gold – Pullback almost completed
We anticipated that the gold price would need some time to consolidate between USD 2,000 and USD 2,075. This scenario is currently unfolding. However, the retracement of the last two weeks has already created an oversold condition on the daily chart, indicating that gold should rebound in the coming weeks. Over the course of this year, we remain confident that gold will reach our new target at USD 2,535.
Nevertheless, we believe escalating geopolitics could also trigger significantly more buying pressure at any time. A devastating turn of events could catapult the gold price towards our price target within just a few weeks or months in our view.
Generally, volatility has increased in the gold market, and we observe more and more erratic intraday moves and swings. The war between the paper market of the west and the physical demand from the East is intensifying and symbolic for what’s going on in the big scheme of things. We continue to be bullish on gold and only from spring onwards do we foresee more temporary headwinds for the gold price.