Gold Overcoming Dollar

 | Sep 15, 2023 03:21PM ET

Gold has been vexed in recent months by the US dollar soaring again.  Its latest blast higher prematurely truncated a resurging gold upleg again, damaging sector psychology again.  Contrarian traders ought to be familiar with this script of Fed hawkishness goosing the dollar which unleashes big gold-futures selling.  Yet this recurring gold-bearish theme since early 2022 is crumbling, gold is starting to overcome the US dollar.

The last couple of months don’t feel like it, as gold plunged 4.5% at worst between mid-July to mid-August.  That killed a promising rally that had just technically confirmed gold’s powerful upleg was resuming.  That month-long pummeling was driven by the benchmark US Dollar Index rocketing up 3.5%, scaring gold-futures speculators into aggressively selling.  Gold did lose ground relative to the dollar during that span.

But while the USDX’s scorching momentum-chasing rally continued, gold defied that and bounced quite substantially.  By last Friday the US dollar gains had grown to a massive 5.3% in just 1.9 months, enormous for the world reserve currency.  Yet gold’s rebound left it down merely 2.1% in that entire timeframe!  That made for a great show of relative strength versus the dollar, way better than the dividing line of mirrored parity. When gold falls less than the dollar rallies, it is outperforming.  Gold is overcoming the dollar in these scenarios.  That’s a bullish omen implying speculators are exhausting their gold futures selling firepower, which is quite finite.  Once these gold-dominating traders’ collective positioning gets excessively bearish, it has to soon mean reverting to proportional buying.  That propels gold sharply higher rekindling stalled uplegs.

Much of gold’s volatile price action since the Fed started hiking rates in early 2022 resulted from this interplay between the US dollar’s fortunes and gold futures trading.  Generally, the USDX surged on major economic data that was considered Fed-hawkish, supporting more rate hikes.  Those dollar gains fueled gold futures selling driving gold lower.  But with this dynamic on its last legs, gold will soon break those shackles.

This chart reveals the opposing gold and USDX price action over the last few years or so, including these last couple of months.  The Federal Reserve’s individual federal-funds-rate hikes are superimposed on top, combining for a monster rate-hike cycle.  It was the most extreme this central bank has ever attempted, starting at zero and quickly skyrocketing to multi-decade highs!  The Fed is running out of room to keep hiking.