President Trump's escalating trade
war appears to be affecting gold prices, which respond to a stronger dollar. The tariffs will make Chinese goods more
expensive, but the Chinese can make their goods cheaper by making their
currency cheaper to offset the effects of the tariffs. There are many ways the Chinese can do this: The yuan is pegged to the dollar, so they can
lower the peg. This is easy to do
because the Chinese owe at least a trillion dollars in loans to the US, and they hold
trillions in dollars and dollar-denominated loans that they’ve made to the US
government. If they purchase dollars, the dollar will strengthen, and Chinese
goods will become cheaper, offsetting the tariffs.
In turn, the price of gold is affected by the dollar. A
stronger dollar means cheaper gold. That correlation has held this week.
In
light of today’s White
House threats of an additional $200 billion in tariffs, the S&P 500 fell almost one percent and gold
fell back to $1244, a fall of about $10.
The yuan
renminbi-to-dollar exchange rate has fallen over the past couple of days to
$0.1497, the lowest level this year.
It
will be seen whether gold can hold a technical $1240 inflection point. If not, there may be a good way down as the Sino-American
trade-and-currency war escalates. That might provide a good entry point for
gold, perhaps below the $1,000 mark.
Hope is not prediction, though.
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