Chart Of The Day: Gold Sets Stage For Breakout

 | Oct 16, 2020 09:42AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

Caught between a rock and a hard place, gold has been unable to make a more meaningful comeback over the past couple of days and was holding in negative territory on the week, at the time of writing in the early hours of Friday. But as the metal continues to coil inside narrowing ranges, a big breakout could be on the cards soon.

The buck-denominated precious metal has not benefited much from the recent risk-off trade as investors reduced their exposure to the EUR/USD and stocks most sensitive to lockdown, such as the hospitality sector, after virus cases spiralled in Europe, causing the US dollar index to correspondingly rebound.

But heightened concerns over the economic impact of the resurgent virus cases in Europe and elsewhere means global interest rates will likely remain low for longer in order to support the recovery. As a result, we have already seen benchmark government bonds rally, causing yields on German bunds and US Treasuries to come under renewed pressure. When bond yields fall, this usually boosts the appeal of lower-yielding or non-interest-bearing assets, such as gold and silver.

Thus, the falls in yields have helped to offset the negative impact on gold arising from a rebound in the dollar index.

So, gold has been finely balanced, and some investors are undoubtedly waiting for some other macro stimulus to trigger a rally—or indeed a sell-off—in gold prices. But as concerns grow over the economic recovery, there may now be more urgency by governments to respond to the second wave of infections by providing fiscal stimulus.

Therefore, there is a chance we could finally see some breakthrough in negotiations over the EU recovery fund and the US stimulus package over the coming days. If so, this should not only be good news for stocks, but should be positive for precious metals too.

Indeed, stimulus is what has been driving both stocks and precious metals higher in recent years. Although the correlation between gold and the S&P may not bee too strong, they have had a positive relationship, nonetheless:


Gold vs.


1 week


1 month


3 months


6 months


1 year

US 2Y T-Note

-0.59

-0.44

0.19

0.89

0.84

US 10Y T-Note

-0.34

-0.17

0.31

0.67

0.83

EUR/USD

0.90

0.94

0.79

0.93

0.78

USD/JPY

-0.40

-0.48

-0.34

-0.78

-0.77

Silver

0.96

0.98

0.84

0.97

0.79

US SPX 500

0.26

0.34

0.31

0.86

0.39

Gold’s negative relationship with the dollar is hardly surprising when you look at the correlation coefficients of the EUR/USD and USD/JPY. But to underscore the above point about stimulus, notice how strong gold’s relationship is with bond prices over the longer periods of 6 months and 1 year.

Meanwhile, gold is potentially coiling for a breakout from a technical perspective, following the recent consolidation: