Gold Steadies Above 2,400 After Profit-taking

2024-07-22
Summary:

Gold prices steadied above $2,400 on Monday after falling over 2% in the last session due to profit-taking following its rise to an all-time high.

Gold Prices Steadied Above $2,400 in Early Asian Hours on Monday

Bullion fell more than 2% in the last trading session as profit taking kicked in following its jump to an all-time peak.

On the physical side, Asian gold demand was sluggish last week, reflecting customers' reluctance to make new purchases despite deep discounts, who were instead seen capitalizing on record-high bullion prices.


But China still has plenty of appetite for gold despite pausing in May and June, as its holdings remain low as a share of reserves and geopolitical tensions persist, according to industry experts and data.


The PBOC started reporting gold purchases and kept doing so for 18 months after Western sanctions froze Russia’s assets. It was the world’s largest single buyer in 2023, the WGC said.


Even so, gold's share of China's overall reserves, which include its reserve position and SDRs at the IMF, while at a record high of 4.9% is low compared to the global average of 16%.


Speculators raised their net long positions in the yellow metal to the highest in more than 2 years last week, according to the CFTC data. Global gold ETFs saw inflows two months in a row last month.

XAUUSD

Gold has seen solid support around the $2,400 level. The 50 SMA could be the key to whether its short-term uptrend will continue. It must clear $2,450 again to bolster the case for another record high.


Disclaimer: This material is for general information purposes only and is not intended as (and should not be considered to be) financial, investment or other advice on which reliance should be placed. No opinion given in the material constitutes a recommendation by EBC or the author that any particular investment, security, transaction or investment strategy is suitable for any specific person.

​China and Europe still investable under US tariffs

​China and Europe still investable under US tariffs

Trump tariffs may spike yuan volatility, China surplus hits record, euro near parity. Chinese stocks are downgraded but offer record dividends.

2025-02-05
​Yen regains safe-haven appeal

​Yen regains safe-haven appeal

The yen hit a seven-week high on Wednesday as delays to tariffs on Canada and Mexico eased concerns about the Fed's ability to cut interest rates.

2025-02-05
​Loonie rocked by US-Canada rivalry

​Loonie rocked by US-Canada rivalry

The Canadian dollar steadied after rebounding from multi-year lows, while the US dollar dropped as Trump paused new tariffs on Mexico for one month.

2025-02-04