Gold Prices Rise Most In 11 Months As US Politics Poison Markets

Gold prices raced higher as worries about political instability in the US swept financial markets. Capital fled for the safety of Treasury bonds, pushing yields lower. The prospect of market turmoil also cooled Fed rate hike speculation, flattening the priced-in tightening outlook implied in interest rate futures and sinking the US Dollar. Not surprisingly, all this proved supportive for non-yielding and anti-fiat assets.

Meanwhile, crude oil prices rose as EIA inventory data showed stockpiles shed 1.75 million barrels last week. While the draw proved to be smaller than the markets’ consensus forecast calling for a 2.47 million barrel outflow, the outcome was clearly more supportive than the leading API figures published in the prior session. That report argued for a build of 882k barrels over the same period.

Looking ahead, a deepening slump in S&P 500 futures ahead of the opening bell on Wall Street hints that another risk-off day looms ahead. The WTI benchmark is following suit, hinting that broader negativity may overshadow asset-specific considerations. Gold prices may continue to thrive as yields wither but hawkish-leaning comments from Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester may temper gains somewhat.

GOLD TECHNICAL ANALYSIS – Gold prices scored their largest gain in almost 11 months after the formation of a bullish Morning Star candlestick pattern signaled recovery, as expected. Pivotal resistance now looms at 1280.35 (trend line, 38.2% Fibonacci expansion), with a daily close above that exposing the 50% level at 1300.73. Alternatively, a turn back below the 23.6% Fib at 1255.15 paves the way for a retest of the 14.6% expansion at 1239.61

Chart created using TradingView

CRUDE OIL TECHNICAL ANALYSIS – Crude oil prices re-established a foothold above the 50% Fibonacci retracement at 48.77, threatening trend line support-turned-resistance once again. A push above this barrier, now at 49.47, exposes the 61.8% level at 49.94. Alternatively, a turn back below 48.77 opens the door for a retest of the 38.2% Fib at 47.59.

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Author: Travis Esquivel

Travis Esquivel is an engineer, passionate soccer player and full-time dad. He enjoys writing about innovation and technology from time to time.

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