Intraday Market Thoughts Archives

Displaying results for week of Feb 06, 2022

GBP & Silver Separated at Birth

Feb 10, 2022 17:35 | by Ashraf Laidi

Another blowout US CPI report triggers another false reaction in metals. 5 months ago, gold would plummet $50 on the mere mention of Fed tapering. Today, gold rallies alongside silver despite a 70% chance of a 50-bp rate hike next month. Gold's ability to survive through the tightening landscape (especially flattening yield curves) reminds me of Bitcoin's ability to fight back in 2019 and 2020 despite stolen coins, shutdown exchanges and extraordinary volatility. We notified our WhatsApp Broadcast subscribers yesterday (see below the GBP chart). 

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GBP & Silver Separated at Birth - Gbpusd Silver Feb 10 2022 (Chart 1)

The other thing I want to highlight is the similarity between daily charts of GBPUSD and XAGUSD. I reiterated to our WGP since Jan 27 that I remained long GBPUSD, as long as the right shoulder support of 1.3350 held up. And it did just that before mounting a solid recovery ahead/after the BoE decision. Our bullishness in gold and silver was maintained as long as XAUXAG failed the 82 resistance. It is no longer a secret that I emphasized the importance of gold/silver ratio over the past 5 months, the most recent lesson was seen in 15:04 mins of this video

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GBP & Silver Separated at Birth - Whatsapp Ecmi (Chart 2)
 

Food ex USD

Feb 8, 2022 17:59 | by Ashraf Laidi

Most composite indices of food prices are pointing to multi-year highs, some even at new records. More specifically, the CRB's Food Index has just surpassed its previous high from March 2011. The confluence of 8-year highs in energy prices and decade highs in wheat, soya and corn have undoubtedly contributed to the surge in foodstuffs. Yet, all this occurred despite a strengthening US dollar. Would the surge in food prices have been higher, had the US dollar not strengthened 8% from last year's lows? For a perspective on how things could shape up ahead, let's look at past food crises below. 

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Food ex USD - Food Index (Chart 1)

The 2008 record in food prices was a function of a commodity surpercycle, helped by biofuel food crises, a 40% tumble in USD and massive commodities purchases from China.  The 2011 food price boom was also helped by a fresh commodities rally brought about by USD weakness and accelerating China demand for metals and energy. 

WHAT HAPPENS NOW? Supply-driven pressures in energy and metals may subside, but unlikely to be reversed any time soon, owing to reduced investments and ongoing supply chain challenges.

WHAT IF if US dollar makes the transition from range-bound to outright decline due to catch-up tightening from the rest of the world and deficit obstacles to more Fed hikes. Could the food crisis be exacerbated by a weak USD?

We've definitely entered a new phase--where this is no longer about monetary policy normalization. It is about BoE's Bailey cautioning people against demanding wage hikes (he did say that), president Biden calming inflation nerves on  primetime and even uber dovish ECB's Lagarde finally opened the possibility for a 2022 rate hike. 

Central bank tightening is surely here to stay. As long as there policy errors from  from overtightening are avoided, food prices will not be stabilising anytime soon, neither will the risk of unrest in developing nations and equity market volatility in the developed world.