Gold Advances to 2014 High While China Data Weighs On Copper and Oil

Talking Points

  • Fear-flows help gold to break above $1,360

  • US Dollar recovery may weigh on precious metals

  • China data to offer guidance on copper and WTI

The gold bulls are on the charge with the precious metal breaking above the $1,360 level as elevated geopolitical tensions have likely bolster safe-haven demand for the commodity. Meanwhile crude oil is struggling in late Asian trade following declines during US hours on the back of a bearish inventories report.

Fear Flows Drive Gold Higher

Ukrainian tensions continue to dominate news headlines which has likely driven investors towards gold and silver as alternative stores of wealth. As noted in yesterday’s commodities report the yellow metal generally performs well during periods of heightened geopolitical turmoil. While the West threatens sanctions against Russia, the stand-off looks set to continue, which may act to support gold prices.

Greenback Recovery

The precious metals space has also likely benefited from a weaker US Dollar. The greenback has continued to flounder over the past month with lukewarm US economic data likely weighing on Fed policy expectations. Traders should be mindful of the potential for the US Dollar to recover some lost ground in the session ahead on the back of hawkish comments from would-be Fed Officials Fischer, Brainard, and Powell at their upcoming confirmation hearing. Retail sales data from the world’s largest economy may also prove noteworthy, as a better-than-expected reading may feed into “taper” bets and weigh on the precious metals.

Crude Oil Suffers Post Inventories Report

The Weekly Petroleum Status Report released by the DOE overnight revealed the 8th straight gain in crude oil inventories which sent the WTI contract lower. Newswires have attributed the build in inventories to seasonal factors including more moderate weather on the US East Coast and lower demand from refineries. If fresh supply continues to outstrip demand for the commodity in the coming weeks, oil may extend its recent declines.

China Demand Concerns Weigh on Copper

Copper has erased earlier gains towards the end of Asian trading following the release of a disappointing set of Chinese Industrial Production and Retail Sales data. The worse-than-anticipated prints add to already existing concerns over slowing demand for commodities from the Asian giant. If traders during European hours run with the story, we may see copper and growth-sensitive commodities take their next leg lower. However, if broad-based risk aversion fails to materialise, any declines may be muted.