Yield Surge Punishes Oil While Gold Sends Out Inflation Feelers


Crude oil

Crude oil which in recent weeks increasingly had been showing signs of having reached its short-term price potential, dropped the most since October after being given a double blow on Wednesday from the International Energy Agency and the FOMC. In their latest monthly Oil Market Report, the IEA raised questions about some of the reasons that have supported Brent crude oil’s recent surge to $70/b. Specifically, the risk of a new super-cycle and a looming shortfall were given the cold shoulder.

Not only do they see ample oil inventories despite a steady decline from the massive overhang that piled up during 2Q20. They also highlighted the hefty amount of spare production capacity, currently in the region of 8 million barrels/day that is being held back by OPEC+ members. With the recovery in fuel demand still fragile, especially as the vaccine rollout hits problems across several regions, most noticeably Europe, global demand growth forecasts around 5.5 million barrels/day in 2021 could end up being too optimistic.

With these developments in mind, it is clear that the 80% rally since early November, when the first vaccine news broke, has primarily been driven by OPEC+ withholding production. Thereby leaving the price exposed to any negative news related to demand. The floodgates opened once Brent broke below $66.50, and from there it was an almost a straight line drop down to $61.5. While these new lower levels better reflect the current oil market situation, the risk remains that speculators may not yet have fully adjusted their positions.

On the other hand, having fought so hard to support prices during the past year, OPEC+ members are unlikely to remain passive spectators should the price drop further. If it did we shall expect verbal intervention as the first line of defense, and if not enough, extend current cuts for longer or even cut more barrels. OPEC+ have plenty tools available and led by Saudi Arabia they have shown willingness to use them.

From a technical perspective Brent has broken the uptrend from November but so far found support at the 50-day SMA at $61.50, and a weekly close above would support risk sentiment and potentially signal a bounce over the coming days.

Gold

Gold received an initial boost after the FOMC confirmed its dovish stance by maintaining an outlook for unchanged rates until 2024. While effectively flashing a very accommodative green light for risky assets and dollar bears, the market instead took fright from the ongoing question of whether the Fed is making a “policy mistake” in seeing the rise in longer US yields as entirely benign.

Furthermore, the market concluded that the Fed will accept both the economy and inflation to run wild, with the latter being allowed to rise and run above 2% for a prolonged period of time. While initially falling in sympathy with other asset classes, gold increasingly began attracting a bid as it tried to reestablish the reflation credentials that has been thoroughly missing for the past few months. Signs that it is having some success can be seen in the relation between gold and US 10-year real yields. On March 8, when the real yield traded at -0.6%, gold was challenging support at $1680, some 60 dollars below its current level.

While other commodities, due to elevated positioning, such as oil and grains have been left exposed to risk reduction, gold was already unloved by investors. The lack of momentum in recent months had resulted in hedge funds reducing their net long in COMEX gold futures to a near two-year low at 42k lots (4.2 million ounces), an 85% reduction from the recent peak in February 2020.

Total holdings in bullion-backed exchange-traded funds as reported by Bloomberg have seen continued reductions during the past 30 days, falling to a nine-month low at 3,144 tons, a 9% reduction from last year’s peak. One region, however, which has gone against the trend is in China where ETF holdings in February, according the World Gold Council, increased by 8 tons to a record 68.6 tons, after investors faced turmoil’s in the Chinese stock market.

For now, gold remains stuck in no man’s land and despite having seen a slight improvement in the technical outlook, that’s where it remains. For that to change and in order to attract renewed demand, especially from leveraged accounts, it needs to retake $1765/oz and until it does we maintain a short-term neutral outlook, while maintaining a medium-term bullish belief in gold’s ability to recover back towards $2000/oz.



Read More:Yield Surge Punishes Oil While Gold Sends Out Inflation Feelers

2021-03-21 20:55:43

Get real time updates directly on you device, subscribe now.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

Get more stuff like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.