Gold Should Remain Bearish After Powell’s Decision

 | Jun 16, 2022 09:05AM ET

The FOMC's interest rate hike by 75 basis points to fight inflation became a fact. What do the Fed's hawkish actions and plans mean for the gold market?h2 Another Squeeze; Don’t Panic/h2

With the FOMC increasing interest rates by 75 basis points on Jun. 15, inflation has officially forced the Fed’s hand. Moreover, with the latest rise expanding the count to six rate hikes in 2022 (25 basis point increments), the tally puts us on .

However, with the PMs (and most assets) rallying during Chairman Jerome Powell’s press conference, I warned earlier in the day that could materialize. For context, it wasn’t a prediction. I simply noted that extremely bearish positioning could lead to a reversion. I wrote:

With the recent carnage across the financial markets rattling the bulls, sentiment and positioning are extremely stretched. Therefore, while a ‘sell the rumor, buy the news’ event may unfold, it’s prudent to stay focused on the S&P 500 and the GDXJ ETF’s medium-term downtrends.

The liquidation frenzy (margin calls) that erupted recently coincided with hedge funds going on the largest two-day selling spree on record. If you analyze the chart below, you can see that Goldman Sachs’ prime brokerage data shows the z-score of combined net dollars sold on Jun. 10 and Jun. 13 exceeded the sell-off following the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

Thus, while it’s far from a sure thing, it’s prudent to note how these variables may impact the short-term price action.