Precious Metals & Energy - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - The first week of the Biden administration brought mixed fortunes for commodities - mixed is about the best description for it, as gold and other precious metals gained for the first time since the Christmas week, while oil and most other energy markets dipped.

While directionally, the different asset classes seemed to go the right away - i.e. the White House’s aggressive push for more stimulus lifting gold and new Covid lockdowns in China weighing on oil - the percentages on the weekly moves were modest, even puny, considering what was at stake.

For starters, consider President Joe Biden’s spending bill for the pandemic that starts at $1.9 trillion.

This isn’t something to be treated with nonchalance, given that the U.S. federal budget deficit itself is already at $4.5 trillion or so, after adding the Trump administration’s $3 trillion plus COVID-19 stimulus for last year. The national debt is, meanwhile, approaching $28 trillion, and total debt-to-GDP is at a stunning 146%.

And Biden has repeatedly said the $1.9 trillion is just a beginning. By the time, his administration is done fighting the pandemic, the federal deficit could be double-digits. One can only imagine the dollar debasement that will cause.

That’s not all. Monetary expansion is coming too. While the United States appears to be in the relatively early stages of a monetary expansion cycle, the so-called M2 monetary base could still increase substantially and set the country up for a return to the 2008/2009 financial crisis days.

With the dilution of the fiat monetary system, higher inflation is most certainly on the way. Gold prices have a very strong correlation on a long-term basis with monetary base expansion.

Yet, bears were allowed to attack gold prices in the final week of December - and, again, in the first week of this year - with such ferocity that belied any rational thinking, considering that the yellow metal has been a time-honored hedge against any dollar weakness or inflation.

The blame for gold’s tumble in that period was laid squarely on surging U.S. bond yields, namely that of the benchmark 10-year Treasury note. The argument was that the bond market feared near-zero interest rates will suddenly spike if the trillions of dollars of stimulus put to work end up boosting the economy faster than thought. The notion persists despite vehement counter-arguments from the Federal Reserve.

What really took the cake though was institutions diverting money from gold into bitcoin, which had suddenly taken on a Tesla-like mania in recent weeks amid the FOMO - Fear Of Missing Out - rally. Some of that lunacy was doused in the past two weeks as bitcoin lost 20% from record highs above $40,000. The craze over cryptos will probably return since foolery and markets can never be separated forever.