|

Gold remains in $1,300/$1,320 range despite weaker dollar

  • Brexit

  • US/China trade talks

  • Gold

  • USD

  • Oil

May’s defeat nothing more than posturing in Parliament

Softer sessions in the US and Asia overnight appear to be taking their toll on European markets ahead of the open, with indices expected to open a little lower on the final trading day of the week.

As much as Brexit may feel like the most important thing in the world right now to those of us sitting in the UK, I don’t think the wider community is quite so caught up in all the play-acting and faux drama. Theresa May’s so-called humiliating defeat in Parliament on Thursday was just the latest in a series of symbolic gestures designed to give the allusion of weakness of the PMs deal unless Brussels offers more substantial concessions. It is in no way indicative of how MPs will vote at a minute to midnight when it matters.

This kind of political posturing has been a regular feature of the negotiations over the last couple of years and has been significantly ramped up in recent months as MPs have been given the opportunity to express their views and make statements in Parliament. I’m not sure it will be too effective in negotiations with Brussels but perhaps we’ll find out the closer we get to the end of March. It’s clear that the EU does not take the threat of no deal very seriously and moves like this are deliberately designed to force them to. I’m not convinced it will.

Will Xi involvement be the catalyst for a truce extension

Negotiations in Beijing are likely to attract more of the attention of the investing community as President Xi joins the talks in an attempt to deliver the kind of progress that will ensure a 60 day extension to the truce.  A deal after only 90 days of talks was always unlikely making this the more realistic target from day one, something that if achieved will reassure investors.

Gold remains in $1,300/$1,320 range despite weaker dollar

The risk aversion we saw on Thursday in response to the weaker US retail sales data gave gold a little kick higher, with its role as a safe haven seeing it favoured. This was of course helped by a weaker dollar in response to the figures but gold remained in the $1,300 to $1,320 range as neither bulls or bears managed again to significantly seize the upper hand.

Oil strongly pushing major resistance

Oil has previously struggled during previous periods of risk aversion but, like its fellow commodities, is fond of a weaker dollar and is continuing to respond to favourable reports this week, including Saudi Arabia’s commitment to cutting output by an additional 500,000 barrels per day by March. Brent and WTI are both now seriously testing a major resistance zone, around $65 and $55, respectively, the break of which could be the catalyst for another rally.

Author

Craig Erlam

Craig Erlam

MarketPulse

Based in London, Craig Erlam joined OANDA in 2015 as a market analyst. With many years of experience as a financial market analyst and trader, he focuses on both fundamental and technical analysis while producing macroeconomic commentary.

More from Craig Erlam
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD stays defensive below 1.1900 as USD recovers

EUR/USD trades in negative territory for the third consecutive day, below 1.1900 in the European session on Thursday. A modest rebound in the US Dollar is weighing on the pair, despite an upbeat market mood. Traders keep an eye on the US weekly Initial Jobless Claims data for further trading impetus. 

GBP/USD holds above 1.3600 after UK data dump

\GBP/USD moves little while holding above 1.3600 in the European session on Thursday, following the release of the UK Q4 preliminary GDP, which showed a 0.1% growth against a 0.2% increase expected. The UK industrial sector activity deteriorated in Decembert, keeping the downward pressure intact on the Pound Sterling. 

Gold sticks to modest intraday losses as reduced March Fed rate cut bets underpin USD

Gold languishes near the lower end of its daily range heading into the European session on Thursday. The precious metal, however, lacks follow-through selling amid mixed cues and currently trades above the $5,050 level, well within striking distance of a nearly two-week low touched the previous day.

Cardano eyes short-term rebound as derivatives sentiment improves

Cardano (ADA) is trading at $0.257 at the time of writing on Thursday, after slipping more than 4% so far this week. Derivatives sentiment improves as ADA’s funding rates turn positive alongside rising long bets among traders.

The market trades the path not the past

The payroll number did not just beat. It reset the tone. 130,000 vs. 65,000 expected, with a 35,000 whisper. 79 of 80 economists leaning the wrong way. Unemployment and underemployment are edging lower. For all the statistical fog around birth-death adjustments and seasonal quirks, the core message was unmistakable. The labour market is not cracking.

Sonic Labs’ vertical integration fuels recovery in S token

Sonic, previously Fantom (FTM), is extending its recovery trade at $0.048 at the time of writing, after rebounding by over 12% the previous day. The recovery thesis’ strengths lie in the optimism surrounding Sonic Labs’ Wednesday announcement to shift to a vertically integrated model, aimed at boosting S token utility.