Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - Fasten your seat-belts: The Covid “safe play” versus “lockdown trade” could see gut-wrenching swings in oil and gold prices in the coming weeks as hopes over vaccines and therapeutics face off with potential stay-home orders as hospital ICUs get overrun.

The just-ended week gives us a preview of what the “new normal” could be.

Investor over-exuberance with progress reported by Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) on its Covid-19 vaccine trials triggered a massive rally in risk assets on Monday. It gave Wall Street’s Dow a 3% boost — its biggest one-day gain since June. And crude oil an 8% advance, the largest since May.

But as the week wore on, the extremely challenging storage conditions for the Pfizer vaccine, as well as delivery logistics, became clearer, diminishing those gains.

In the case of gold, being on the opposite side of the risk trade turned out to be a costly proposition for holders of the yellow metal.

Futures of gold plunged more than $100 an ounce, or 4.5%, on Monday - the worst one-day plunge since August.

By Friday though, the safe-haven had recovered some of its losses, acting as a hedge against ramping Covid-19 cases.

A major U.S. lockdown similar to the March-May period may be inevitable if enough state governors decide to shut down territories under their jurisdiction to curb the spread of the virus, even if the Trump administration refuses to initiate such a move.

Fear of hospital ICUs being overrun reemerged this week as coronavirus infections set new daily record highs, breaching 150,000 cases on Thursday. According to Johns Hopkins University, more than 10.8 million Americans have contracted the virus since February, and more than 245,000 have died from complications caused by it.

The possibility of a second national lockdown is quite real with President-Elect Joe Biden’s coronavirus task force advisor, Dr. Michael Osterholm, saying a four-to-six-week closure of businesses could help break back of the pandemic.

It’s not just the U.S. that’s facing economic curbs. In Europe, freeway operator Vinci reported on Friday that traffic fell by 48% in the first full week of November in response to the government's latest public health measures. Those measures in Europe's second-largest economy are set to stay in place until Dec 1 at least. England is also in a state of semi-lockdown, while German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned on Friday that her government's recent restrictions on social gatherings may have to last through the new year.

All these could mean undue volatility in oil and gold.