What Is Good for the Dollar Is Bad for Gold

Originally posted at MarctoMarket.com

The Dollar Index is extending its advancing streak today into its eighth consecutive session. It is at its best level since just before Trump's inauguration. It has retraced 38.2% of its decline from the January 3 high of 103.82. That retracement was found a little below 101.

The 50% retracement objective is a hair above 101.50, while the 61.8% objective is found near 102.07. The five-day average crossed above the 20-day moving average before the weekend for the first time in over a month. Technical indicators such as the RSI, MACDs, and Slow Stochastics confirm a constructive technical backdrop.

Gold and the Dollar Index tend to move in opposite directions. In fact, over the past 100 sessions, the two have an inverse correlation of -0.93. Although the correlation has softened a little, over the past 60 days, the correlation is about -0.81.

Gold, as this Great Graphic created on Bloomberg illustrates, has been moving higher since shortly after the Fed hiked rates in the middle of December. Those gains carried the precious metal 10% higher and came within a couple of dollars of a 50% retracement of the decline from last year's high (recorded in July near 75.45). That high of almost 45 also was less 1% from completing the 61.8% retracement of the sell-off since the US election early last November.

Gold's technical tone has weakened. The RSI did not confirm the push to new highs last week, leaving a bearish divergence in its wake. The MACDs are about to cross lower, and the Slow Stochastics are also curling over. A move below the 14-16 area, where the 20- and 200-day moving average converge would be the preliminary signal. The Fibonacci retracements are found near 97.50, 82.95, and 68.35. However, if our assessment is correct, a return to last December's low near 21 should not be ruled out.

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Managing Partner and Chief Markets Strategist
Bannockburn Global Forex
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