Gold, USDX: Did Powell Spoil The Party?

 | Jul 30, 2021 11:14AM ET

The party was just gathering steam, and then… Powell entered, the ultimate spoil sport, making the Fed dovish again.

The War On Debt

With U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell struggling to adequately define “transitory” during his press conference on July 28, the market narrative has shifted from ‘hawkish Fed’ to ‘dovish Fed.’ And with the U.S. dollar bearing the brunt of investors’ wrath, the ‘all-clear’ sign flashed in front of the precious metals. However, with post-Fed rallies mainstays in the precious metals’ historical record, the recent euphoria is much more semblance than substance. Thus, while Powell’s persistent patience elicits fears of financial repression, today’s economic environment lacks many of the qualities that made the gambit viable in the past.

To explain, financial repression includes measures such as direct government financing (the Fed prints money and lends it directly to the U.S. Treasury), interest rate caps (yield curve control) and extensive oversight of commercial banks (reserve requirements, controlling the flow of credit). In a nutshell: governments use the strategy to keep interest rates low and ensure that they can finance their debt. And with the U.S. federal debt as a percentage of GDP currently at 128% (updated on July 29), some argue that’s exactly what’s happening. Moreover, with the U.S. 10-year real yield hitting an all-time low of -1.15% on July 28, is the Fed simply turning back the clock to the 1940s?