FOMC Hits Gold And Silver

 | Oct 31, 2014 08:07AM ET

Trading in precious metals was quiet until Wednesday morning, when prices began to soften. When the FOMC meeting released its policy statement at 2.00pm EST, Gold and Silver responded by falling heavily, with gold breaching the $1200 level yesterday (Thursday) and silver crashing through $17 to a low of $16.33.

This morning (Friday) gold and silver fell further in overnight ahead of the London opening, with gold trading down to $1173 and silver at $16.00. It is clear that the bears, including the bullion banks with short books, mounted an attack on the $1180 level, where there were stops to take out.

So a major test is taking place and the bears are winning. Behind these moves is a strong US Dollar, weakening commodities generally, and a collapsing yen. The dollar is responding to the absence of further quantitative easing, traders seemingly surprised that the Fed is ignoring signs of economic weakness. To the contrary, the Fed's FOMC statement pointed out that unemployment continues to fall. Furthermore, there is little doubt the Fed is mindful of the lower budget deficit and the lack of liquidity in bond markets, the consequence of the Fed being the dominant buyer of Treasuries.

While currency markets interpreted the FOMC minutes as hawkish, this is an overstatement. After all, the Fed had clearly stated that QE would end this month, and unless there is some sort of crisis to back-track on, renewed QE would have only undermined the Fed's credibility. The truth has probably more to do with extremes of bullishness fuelling equities, with broker loans soaring to new heights and sovereign bonds ignoring any future upturn in interest rates. Fund managers committed to a perpetual state of market elevation are not about to spoil the atmosphere with thoughts it might just be a bubble.

Along with all the positive sentiment in equities and bonds goes negative sentiment in precious metals. In both gold and silver it appears that new bear positions have been opened, making both metals heavily oversold. First let us look at gold.