Gold Bottoming Despite Fed

 | Jun 16, 2023 02:52PM ET

Gold’s recent pullback looks to be bottoming, despite ongoing aggressive Fed hawkishness. In recent weeks the yellow metal has consolidated high, defying aggressive Fedspeak, another big US-jobs upside surprise, and hawkish rate forecasts from top Fed officials. This resilience leading right into gold’s major summer-doldrums seasonal low coincides with speculators maintaining really bullish gold-futures positioning.

Gold was enjoying a strong upleg into early May, powering an impressive 26.3% higher in 7.2 months. But after rapidly surging to $2,050 and challenging all-time-record nominal highs, gold was really getting stretched. Trading way up at 1.132x its 200-day moving average, gold was very overbought. While still under the upleg-slaying danger zone over 1.160x, a healthy pullback was in order to rebalance sentiment.

That’s exactly what happened over the next several weeks. Gold fell 5.4% to $1,941, with very-hawkish comments from top Fed officials playing a big role. While the sharpness and magnitude of that mid-upleg pullback were normal, it succeeded in quickly sapping excessive greed. Herd psychology decayed back to bearish, as traders soon forgot about gold’s powerful run leading into that. Gold increasingly fell out of favor.

Over the several weeks since that initial selloff low, gold has ground sideways on balance. And that has been a high consolidation, in the upper middle of gold’s upleg trading range. So this pullback’s technical damage has been pretty minor, certainly not justifying such pessimistic sentiment. But bearishness and apathy are par for the course in this seasonally weakest time of the year for gold, the dreaded summer doldrums.

I wrote a whole essay last week advancing this seasonality-research thread. This chart is updated from that, normalizing gold’s summer seasonal performances across all modern bull-market years. Gold’s price action during those market summers is indexed to 100 as of May’s final closes, recasting it in perfectly-comparable percentage terms. Gold’s recent early-summer behavior is tracking seasonal norms.