Gold rebound pauses after snapping five-week losing streak

Gold futures on Friday fell back to a level last seen in April 2020, under pressure as the U.S. dollar soared versus major rivals and bond yields jumped amid fears aggressive monetary tightening by central banks could spark a global recession.

Price action
Market drivers

Gold failed to benefit from its status as a haven during periods of geopolitical and economic uncertainty.

“The pressure gold is coming under in the current macroeconomic environment, with interest rates going up across the world and likely to continue doing so for a number of months yet, means it is hard to see how the metal can make gains with the question more about how low it will go,” said Rupert Rowling, market analyst at Kinesis Money, in a note.

The Federal Reserve earlier this week delivered another outsize interest rate hike and signaled it would drive rates higher than market participants had previously anticipated. A number of other global central banks also delivered rate increases this week, underlining investor worries about the economic outlook.

Treasury and other government bond yields were jumping Friday morning. Rising bond yields raise the opportunity cost of holding nonyielding assets like commodities. The dollar, meanwhile, continued its march higher, with the ICE U.S. Dollar Index
DXY,
+0.74%

at its highest in more than 20 years. A rising dollar makes commodities priced in the unit more expensive to users of other currencies.

The main supportive factor for gold remains the war in Ukraine, after Russian President Vladimir Putin this week moved to escalate the conflict and hinted at the potential use of nuclear weapons, Rowling said.

“With this week’s announcements already old news for the markets, the focus switches to what the central banks will do next with next week’s slew of inflation data likely to be highly instructive in determining their approach and whether even more aggressive hikes are needed to tame the fast pace at which consumer prices are rising,” he wrote. “If these bring more high prints, then this would exacerbate the downward pressure on gold with banks likelier to implement even larger hikes as a result.”

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