Will Fresh QE From The ECB Boost Gold?

 | Nov 25, 2015 06:23AM ET

The threat of deflation in the Eurozone is an issue that continues to plague the ECB. The current easing measures have failed to drive inflation above 0.3%, which is far short of the 2% inflation target that the ECB is mandated to reach. This has led ECB President Mario Draghi to begin the discussion of further QE to stimulate prices in the region. Just last week Draghi commented that:

“We consider the APP [asset-purchase programme] to be a powerful and flexible instrument, as it can be adjusted in terms of size, composition or duration to achieve a more expansionary policy stance… We will do what we must to raise inflation as quickly as possible. That is what our price stability mandate requires of us.”

Dovish remarks such as these signal the markets that more QE is coming from the ECB. Following the GFC, massive quantitative easing from the Fed drove gold prices to new all-time highs, yet similar sized programs, including those of the ECB, have failed to fuel a bull market in gold. Here we will discuss why an increase in the ECB’s easing measures now will not just fail to be bullish for the metal, but will in fact be likely to drive gold prices lower.

h3 The Currency Argument/h3

New QE from the ECB will see the euro weaken relative to the USD. The chart below clearly shows that since the ECB first began discussion of new easing measures in mid-2014, the euro has fallen significantly. We believe that this decline is likely to continue as we approach the launch of fresh easing from the ECB.