Catalonia’s Suspended Autonomy And Gold

 | Oct 22, 2017 01:37AM ET

Spain’s central government said that it would suspend Catalonia’s autonomy on Saturday. What does it imply for the gold market?

As we informed on Tuesday , Madrid set Thursday morning as the ultimate deadline for Catalonia to declare independence or its willingness to remain a part of Spain. But Catalan president Carles Puigdemont ignored the deadline and did not clarify his position. Instead, he wrote a letter to Rajoy, threatening with a formal declaration of independence in the regional parliament:

“If the government continues to impede dialogue and continues with the repression, the Catalan parliament could proceed, if it is considered opportune, to vote on a formal declaration of independence.”

In response, the Spanish government is to suspend Catalonia’s autonomy on Saturday. In a statement, the central government wrote:

“At an emergency meeting on Saturday, the cabinet will approve measures to be put before the senate to protect the general interest of Spaniards, including the citizens of Catalonia, and to restore constitutional order in the autonomous community.”

Although the crisis over Catalonia deepened (importantly, two pro-independence organizers, Jordi Cuixart and Jordi Sanchez, were imprisoned on Monday), investors were unmoved. Actually, the euro rose against the U.S. dollar yesterday, as one can see in the chart below. So the price of gold increased as well.

Chart 1: EUR/USD from October 17 to October 19, 2017.