Gold prepares for Yellen Testimony

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Published : February 23rd, 2015
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Category : Market Analysis

INTRA-DAY NEWSLETTER ~ Feb 23 2015


With Greece moving to the periphery if only for a few days/hours, this week the US calendar returns to the forefront with Fed Chair Yellen’s semi-annual monetary policy testimony before the Senate Banking Committee tomorrow night and the House Financial Services Committee on Wednesday, which the market will be paying very close attention to for the reconciliation of how the Fed plans to continue on its rate-hiking path despite rapidly deteriorating US macro data that has started 2015 at the worst pace (in terms of downside surprises) since Lehman.

For those who prefer visual summaries, here is the full weekly calendar from BofA:



Three Questions to be Answered this Week

By Marc to Market


The Greek issue has been sufficiently resolved for now that investors' focus will shift elsewhere in the week ahead. The answers to three questions will dominate the market's attention.

* How strong are the deflationary forces?

* Are the cyclical recoveries still intact?

* What is the outlook for Fed policy?

The January inflation readings from the US, EMU and Japan will be released in the coming days. The euro area preliminary data has already been reported. This week's report is expected to confirm the -0.6% year-over-year headline rate and a 0.6% core rate.

Germany and Spain will offer preliminary February readings. Both are not expected to deviate much from the January pace of -0.5% and -1.5% respectively. The monetary response, the ECB's accelerated asset purchase plan, which will include sovereign bonds, will be launched next month.

Even if the ECB's bond buying program can be successfully implemented, for which there is increasing skepticism, it is not clear that it will boost inflation. The BOJ's balance sheet is expanding by 1.4% a month. In the H1 15 it will expand by more than the ECB's over 18-month initial projection. Yet, it is not clear that Japan has slayed its deflation demon. When allowances are made for the retail sales tax increase last April, Japanese CPI is barely positive. Neither the nation's January report nor Tokyo's February report is expected to change much from the previous readings.

Headline US CPI is expected to slip into negative territory (-0.1%) on a year-over-year basis, with a 0.6% decline in January alone. Such a report will likely spur speculation that the Fed cannot raise interest rates with a negative headline inflation. However, the key for policy makers is not headline inflation. They accept that the dramatic decline in energy prices dampens inflation, but its impact on prices is transitory. By this time next year, the bulk of the impact will be dropped by the base effect. The core rate, which in the US excludes food and energy, is more stable and is expected to be unchanged from the 1.6% paces seen in December.

The cyclical recoveries in the euro area and Japan continued into the early part of this year. Perhaps encouraged by strong December exports (17% year-over-year), Japan's industrial production is forecast to have risen by 3% in January. Output rose 0.8% last December and 1.0% in November

New data from the euro area is thin this week. Outside of the inflation reports, the other two reports that will confirm the cyclical recovery. First, Germany's IFO business survey is expected to rise for the fourth consecutive month. Second, money supply growth (M3) has begun strengthening, and this is expected to have continued. The same can be said for bank lending.

Apart from the housing market, which has continued to disappoint, the main new information from the US will be durable goods orders. The January orders are expected to have increased for the first time since last October. A modest 1.6% increase is expected after last December's 3.4% drop.

New from the world's second largest economy may not be as favorable. The February PMI readings will be reported this week. The risk is on the downside. The economy is in a transition and growth has slowed. This should not be exaggerated. Chinese officials appear to believe that within reason, this slowing is acceptable and "natural" given the labor force dynamics. It also allows a catching of the collective breathe and reducing some excesses as it continues its quest for "the China dream" (doubling GDP and GDP per capita between 2010 and 2020).

From a global point of view, even assuming 6 3/4% growth this year, China will contribute about $660 bln to the world economy. This still outstrips the US. Making a generous assumption of 3% growth this year, the US economy will contribute around $520 bln to the world economy.

Some link the likely downward revision in Q4 US GDP to below 2.0% from 2.6% and the fact that Q1 15 growth is looking soft (2.3-2.5%) to the dovish January FOMC minutes. We suspect this is a mistake and expect Fed Chair Yellen to correct this impression in her testimony before Congress.
What resonates with the Fed is not GDP, which as we all know is a flawed measure, but the fact that personal consumption rose 4.3% in Q4, the strongest in more than a decade. Moreover, for those concerned about debt-financed consumption, revolving credit has barely grown. What will resonate with the Fed is that in the last three months the US created over a million jobs for the first time in nearly 20 years.  (Note - that is their assumption and GoldTrends is not tooting the US economy).

The leadership at the Federal Reserve had led many to expect a mid-year lift off. However, doubts have grown, and this has corresponded with a consolidative phase for the dollar. After the FOMC minutes, the December Fed funds futures contract implied an average effective rate of less than 50 bp. Although the market corrected this view a little before the weekend, we expect Yellen make it clear the Fed's patience is not limitless. A hike, not today or tomorrow, but four months from now is still reasonable.

The way the Fed communicated its tapering decision was effective and appears to be deployed again. Tell the market what you are thinking about doing. Offer some time frame. Give investors plenty of time to adjust. The timing is data driven, but it is not completely unpredictable. Finally, execute.

The Fed rightfully did not let the economic contraction in Q1 14 distract it from its tapering strategy, despite the appeal of many. It understands that the recent slowing follows a well-above trend six month growth (April-September) that is partly being corrected now. Even the expected downward revision to Q4 GDP is not all negative, as the downward revision in inventories suggests tat some of those excess being absorbed.

The Fed's leadership has been preparing the market gradually for a change in US monetary policy. The emergency settings that were so necessary in the darkest days are no longer needed. To be sure, the economy is not firing on all cylinders, but no one is really talking about a dramatic increase in interest rates.

Look for Yellen to be patient with US Congress as she explains why the Fed's patience with emergency-level rates may be drawing to a close, and that this is a constructive sign. It is also through this lens that Yellen will likely address questions about the dollar. The exchange value of the dollar is one of the factors taken into account in assessing the monetary conditions.

It is true that all else being equal a rise of the dollar on a broad-traded weighted basis adjusted for inflation will dampen growth. However, all things are not equal, and the strength of the dollar has been offset by the decline in interest rates and oil. Of course, part of the dollar's rise has been fueled by expectations of a Fed hike. Such anticipation will not be an important hurdle to the decision to hike rates later.

(Our thanks to www.zerohedge.com for the above headlines)

Gold Chart
Gold took out the 61% FIB retracement and cleared out the stops that were there and now has rebounded back to 1207. The 1207-1212 area is resistance for Monday and support is 1188-1194. Gold needs to close above 1212 in order to favor a potential support has developed. Any NEW LOW AFTER TODAY favors gold to 1255-1272. It takes a close above 1222 to favor higher to 1240. The short term trend remains bearish at the moment but a close above 1212 will take pressure off the short term. Watch 1207-1212 as resistance on Monday.



CYCLES
The gold inversion has produced a red cycle low and we need to be cautious as red cycle lows favor that gold has returned to medium term basis sideways to lower. While we favor that is the current trend, gold is still expected to move higher into March 5th (Plus or minus 72 hours).

Can we get another cycle inversion? The answer is while it is rare, the answer is yes we could. The chances are only 15% but gold has been so weak it is not out of the question. Any new low after the Monday close will favor another inversion and lower prices into March 5th instead of higher. IF we do get the close below 1196 after Monday, odds will favor gold is going to test 1155-1172.



Silver
Silver reached the last support until 1550 with a touch of 1610. Resistance is 1656-1680 on Monday. Support is that 1600-1610 area. Any new low after today will warn that silver can move lower on the short term. We need a close above 17 to favor higher into the March 5th time frame.




Data and Statistics for these countries : China | Germany | Greece | Japan | Spain | All
Gold and Silver Prices for these countries : China | Germany | Greece | Japan | Spain | All
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Bill Downey is the editor of www.GoldTrends.net where he monitors the price patterns on an hourly, daily, weekly and monthly basis. He offers commentary on what it all means along with support and resistance levels along the way in advance of each day's trade. If you would like to join for 30 days he offers a free trial. Visit his website home page for details.
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