Gold, Crude Brace For More Volatility

 | Jul 18, 2014 06:45AM ET

h2 Talking Points
  • Gold and Silver give back gains as traders unwind fear-driven positioning
  • Crude Oil left vulnerable if Eastern European tensions de-escalate
  • Copper technicals suggest further weakness ahead following break of support

Gold and crude oil could be set for further volatility as heightened geopolitical tensions take the reigns with respect to the direction of the commodities. The flare-up in regional conflicts over the past 24 hours has yielded a dramatic response from WTI and the precious metals. However, without the requisite shifts in the underlying fundamentals, the potential for follow-through may be limited.

Intensifying Tensions Lead Gold And Crude Higher

Gold is giving back some of its recent gains in late Asian trading (currently lower by more than half a percent). The precious metal surged by more than 1 percent on Thursday as reports of a downed commercial flight in a disputed Ukrainian territory flooded newswires and bolstered safe-haven demand for the alternative asset. Uncertainty over the cause of the crash, given its proximity to a hotspot of regional unrest, has prompted an international response that may stand to deepen the divide in Eastern Europe.

If the situation were to escalate further the precious metals could benefit from investors seeking the yellow metal as a safe-haven. However, as has been witnessed during recent bouts of geopolitical tensions, the initial shock reaction often finds little follow-through. This could leave gold and silver vulnerable to a correction as traders reassess the situation, and possibly unwind some of their fear-driven positioning in the precious metals. Similarly, the prospect of sanctions on Russian commodity exports remains unlikely at this stage, suggesting some of the gains for crude based on supply disruption fears may be unfounded.