Gold trades higher as US economy contracts in 2nd consecutive quarter
July 30, 2022558 views0 comments
By Onome Amuge.
Gold recorded its best performance in five months as the U.S. economy technically entered into a recession following a sharp decline for the second quarter in a row.
At the end of the week’s trading, benchmark gold futures on New York’s Comex was up $12.60, or 0.7 percent, at $1,762.90 per ounce, after a session high at $1,765.85 per ounce. For the week, it rose 2.1 percent, its highest since a 4.2 percent gain during the week to February 25, 2022.
Beyond the soon-to-expire August contract, Comex’s most active gold contract for December traded higher to settle up $12.60 on the day at $1,781.80 an ounce to hover around December’s peak of $1784.60.
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Gold’s bullish momentum in the week came after the commerce department reported that U.S. gross domestic product posted a negative 0.9 percent growth in the second quarter, after a contraction of 1.6 percent in first quarter GDP.
The back-to-back negative quarters, according to analysts, technically places the world’s largest economy in a recession.
“The U.S. economy is heading towards a recession and as long as Wall Street believes the Fed will deliver a slower pace of tightening, gold should start seeing safe-haven flows again,” said Ed Moya, analyst at online trading platform OANDA.
Meanwhile, the World Gold Council (WGC), which had previously maintained a bullish view on bullion, said its outlook for the second half of the year was “mixed” at best.
“Despite strong demand in the first half, investment demand, particularly from exchange-traded funds, could end the year essentially flat with 2021 demand,” the WGC said.
On a positive note, the council stated that weaker equities supported by Fed rate hikes as well as fixed income investments could generate upside potential for gold as a safe haven in a recessionary environment.
The WGC further projected that the yellow metal could continue rising until $1,800 if the dollar and bond yields retreat further from projections for softer Federal Reserve rate hikes through the remainder of the year.
According to market data, gold, considered a hedge against inflation, has not been able to hold up to that billing for most of the past two years since hitting record highs above $2,100 in August 2020.
One reason for that has been the rallying dollar index which gained 11 percent this year following a 6 percent gain in 2021.
The dollar, a contrarian trade to gold, has however fallen almost 1 percent in the past days against a basket of six other major currencies, resulting in a higher valuation in the gold market.