Commodities Weekly: Gold Spiked To 7-Year High On Virus Spread

 | Feb 25, 2020 02:45AM ET

The one topic driving sentiment in markets these days is the spread of the CoVid-19 virus beyond China’s borders. Safe-haven assets are in demand, boosting gold, the US dollar and US Treasuries, but hurting industrial metals and oil. The agricultural sector is trading mostly softer amid fears China’s buying of US produce may slow near-term, and is also a victim of the firmer greenback.

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GOLD spiked to a seven-year high yesterday as the number of CoVid-19 cases outside of China spiked, with South Korea seeing a ten-fold increase over five days prompting a code red alert status to be announced in the country. Gold posted the biggest weekly gain since August last week and has touched the highest since February 2013 this week as its safe-haven status escalated.

The jump in gold prices has been kind to Australian miners, whose share prices have risen, but hasn’t been so favourable for the rest of the Australian shares, with the Australia200 index falling the most since August 2019 yesterday.

Speculative investors have also been rushing into safe-haven assets, boosting net long gold positions to the highest on record going back to 1993, according to the latest CFTC data.

SILVER has been rallying for the past three weeks and touched the highest since September 5 yesterday. Silver’s advances have lagged gold’s gains more recently however, so the gold/silver (Mint) ratio has climbed for three straight days. So far, it would appear the rising streak will be broken today.

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Speculative investors have also been loading up on silver, lifting net long positions to the highest since April 2017, according to the latest data snapshot from CFTC as at February 18.

The latest rush to safe-haven assets has indicated that investors regard PALLADIUM more as an industrial metal rather than a precious metal/safe-haven asset, probably due to limited supply and a lack of liquidity in the asset. Palladium is trading weaker so far this week and could bring the recent three-week rally to an end, the reverse of what we have seen in gold.

Speculative investors trimmed net long positions to the lowest since August 2018. They have been net sellers of the commodity for the past five weeks, CFTC data to February 18 show, but during that time palladium jumped to a record high.

PLATINUM closed below the 55-day moving average at 967.0 yesterday, the first time it has done so since December 9. Speculative investors were net sellers of platinum for a third straight week to February 18, CFTC data show, and net long positions are now at the lowest since the week of December 24.

Platinum Daily Chart