|

Risk aversion is back, claims and manufacturing survey reaction, COVID-19 intensity, dollar surges as both Oil and Gold tumble

US stocks are tumbling as the economic outlook for the rest of the year looks bleak due to second wave virus fears and permanent labor market damage. Wall Street appears convinced a return of restrictive measures will yield further economic damage that will threaten the labor market recovery. Traders are not holding their breath for a virus stimulus bill this side of the election so risky assets will have a hard time rallying. A significant selloff however seems unlikely as Wall Street prices in a Biden presidency and massive infrastructure spending.

Jobless Claims

Weekly initial jobless claims continue to paint a very ugly picture of the US economy. This week's reading posted a surprise increase to 898,000, much higher than the consensus estimate of 825,000 and the upwardly revised prior reading of 845,000. The number of Americans filing new claims remains 4x the pre-pandemic level and is ringing alarms that permanent damage to the labor market is happening. With California data still being locked, it is unsure how much worse the numbers could be. The pressure on Washington DC is high, but disturbingly not at a breaking point. Partisan politics is inflicting unnecessary pain and suffering for millions of Americans. What might be needed for Congress to break the impasse is for another major industry to announce massive job losses.

Stimulus

Fiscal stimulus talks should at the very least yield a temporary solution in payroll support and PPE program. Treasury Secretary Mnuchin has conceded with the Democrats' testing demands and is now winning public support in putting to use the $300 billion left in the CARES Act and continuing negotiations for a broader deal. Mnuchin noted that House Speaker Pelosi is holding out for an all or nothing deal, a rare criticism that indicates his growing frustration. Negotiations are now over two months long and it seems Democrats do not want to give President Trump a win before election day.

Manufacturing Surveys

A rare simultaneous release of Empire State and Philly Fed showed the manufacturing rebound continues but momentum is fading. The Empire manufacturing report showed strong increases across the board except for future business conditions, which showed optimism was less positive than last month. The Philly Fed posted a strong improvement, driven by a massive upswing in new orders.

If the manufacturing rebound remains steady, that should be a good sign for future hiring. Optimism for the need to add new employees might be limited however as investors remain uncertain as to how bad the next wave of the coronavirus will be over the colder months.

Oil

Crude prices don't stand a chance of rising as COVID-19 intensity in Europe and the US accelerates. The coronavirus surge is forcing Europe to reinstate pandemic restrictions to curb the virus spread and that is driving the dollar higher and crippling short-term crude demand forecasts.

OPEC + is expecting the oil market recovery to take a long time, in fact it seems every time they have a meeting it seems they need to downgrade their outlook. While no one doubts the upcoming coronavirus lockdowns won't be as stringent as they were earlier in the year, anemic demand will force them to delay any easing of oil production cuts.

With demand expected to improve by several million-bpd next year, WTI crude prices seem destined to be much higher in 2021. Too many short-term headwinds (virus spread/lack of stimulus) will keep oil prices low for the next couple of months.

Gold/Dollar

Gold prices are modestly lower following a much stronger dollar that stemmed from a significant rise in COVID-19 cases across Europe. The dollar gets to wear its crown for a little while longer, but that should not be confused with the beginning of a new trend. Right now, gold is strictly following the inverse relationship with the dollar, but that will not always be the case. Gold's next major bullish catalysts will stem from fresh stimulus across all the major central banks. The outlook is clearly deteriorating across most of Europe, America, and some pockets in Asia. The G-10 central banks are about to resume rate cuts and increase their asset purchase programs.

Gold is hovering around the $1,900 level and seems poised to consolidate until the US presidential election passes. Fiscal stimulus before November 3rd seems less likely and if the election yields a blue wave, Biden's infrastructure spending plan will be very negative for the US dollar and in turn positive for gold. Gold's outlook for the next six months is still for prices to recapture the $2000 level and possibly make a run back towards uncharted territory.

Author

Ed Moya

Ed Moya

MarketPulse

With more than 20 years’ trading experience, Ed Moya is a market analyst with OANDA, producing up-to-the-minute fundamental analysis of geo-political events and monetary policies in the US, Europe, the Middle East and North Africa.

More from Ed Moya
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD climbs to daily highs near 1.1820

EUR/USD now picks up pace and advances to the area of daily peaks north of the 1.1800 barrier at the end of the week. The pair’s decent move higher comes against the backdrop of a generalised lack of direction in the FX galaxy and the mild offered stance in the US Dollar.

GBP/USD trims losses, retests 1.3460

After briefly challenging its key 200-day SMA near 1.3440, GBP/USD now manages to regain some balance and revisit the 1.3460 zone on Friday. Cable’s pullback comes as the selling pressure on the Greenback gathers traction, reigniting some recovery in the risk-linked space.

Gold flirts with four-week highs past $5,200

Gold extends its rebound, climbing for a third consecutive session and pushing back above the $5,200 mark per troy ounce on Friday. The move higher continues to draw support from lingering geopolitical tensions and the ongoing uncertainty surrounding US trade policy, both of which are keeping safe-haven demand firmly in play.

Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple consolidate with short-term cautious bullish bias

Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple are consolidating near key technical areas on Friday, showing mild signs of stabilization after recent volatility. BTC holds above $67,000 despite mild losses so far this week, while ETH hovers around $2,000 after a rejection near its upper consolidation boundary. 

Changing the game: International implications of recent tariff developments

The Supreme Court ruling on International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) tariffs provides limited relief for the rest of the world, with weighted average tariff rates modestly lower.

Starknet unveils strkBTC, shielded Bitcoin transactions on Ethereum Layer 2

Starknet, the Ethereum Layer 2 network developed by StarkWare, today announced strkBTC, a wrapped Bitcoin asset that introduces optional shielding while preserving full DeFi composability.