“The latest euphoria in gold could continue in the coming days as speculative investors liquidate their short positions in futures and options further,” said UBSanalysts Dominic Schnider and Giovanni Staunovo. “A test of the upper bound of our three-month trading range of $1,425 cannot be ruled out, especially with the Chinese market returning this Monday from a long weekend and the U.S. debt-ceiling debate coming into focus.”
Gold bull Andrew Su, CEO of Compass Global Markets in Sydney – who has an end-month target of $1,450 for gold and an end-year target of $1,580 – said continued uncertainty over the U.S. economic outlook and looming budget battles in the U.S. would drive safe haven inflows into gold. “The elephant in the room is the U.S. debt ceiling,” Su said. “The fact the Fed has delayed the tapering of stimulus is a double edged sword. It is in effect recognition by the FOMC that all is not well with the U.S. economy.”
For the third time in three years, the government is eyeing a budget impasse that could force a government shutdown and possible U.S. default, The Wall Street Journal reported on Sept. 20. Congress faces an Oct. 1 deadline – the current fiscal year ends on Sept. 30. – to pass a budget or shut down the government. Assuming a budget is passed, the nation’s debt-ceiling must also be raised or the Treasury will hit the borrowing limit sometime in October, the Journal said.
“We’ll have the debt ceiling issues coming to a head again soon and so it’s probably safer for the Fed to keep things as they are now between now and the December meeting,” said Sean Hyman, Editor of Moneynews at Ultimate Wealth Report. “I expect gold to hit $1,500-$1,570 in the coming months.”
Gold surged 4 percent on Wednesday, the biggest gain since June 2012, after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said the central bank was not on a pre-set course over its monetary easing program. The metal finished the week up about half a percent despite a 2.4 percent correction on Friday after St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard said it was possible the Fed might start to cut bond purchases in October.
“I think we were all taken by surprise last week by the Fed and my continued short-term bearish call on gold was clearly misplaced against the Fed inspired rally,” said Warren Gilman, Chairman and CEO of CEF Holdings. “But this rally will quickly be replaced by the perpetual concern for the ‘inevitable taper’ so I remain a short term gold bear.”
IG Markets’ client positioning in the gold market as of Friday showed 75 percent with open positions are ‘long’, or are betting prices will rise. “I’m not bullish on gold although our client sentiment would show otherwise,” said Kelly Teoh, a Singapore-based strategist with IG Markets in an email on Friday, adding gold will likely consolidate within the band of $1,345 and $1,360 this week.
Though the U.S. data this week will take on heightened sensitivity as markets once again try to guess the Fed’s next move, many see the debate over who will succeed Ben Bernanke as Chairman as the next key driver for bullion markets.