20/07/2016 05:42 AST

Since the start of this month and in the aftermath of the Brexit vote, the markets have been largely range bound.

The British pound went through a brief renaissance in large part because the Bank of England (BoE) held benchmark interest rates unchanged at 0.50 per cent – the markets had been expecting a cut to 0.25 per cent. Perhaps more surprising was how strongly the bank’s monetary policy committee voted in favour of keeping rates unchanged (8 to 1).

This led to a short-term resurgence in the pound, which moved higher against the greenback before finding stiff resistance just below 1.35. Sterling looks to remain entrenched between 1.30 and 1.35 against the greenback.

Upcoming data, through to the end of July, from the UK, which includes inflation data – month on month expected at 0.2 per cent and year-on-year expected at 0.4 per cent – along with employment data should not be enough to shake the pound out of this range.

Maintaining a long strategy for the pound is extremely short- sighted, as the currency is still very fragile and looks highly anaemic in medium term.

Gold continued its consolidation in the 1,300s. Support has held at 1,320 levels, with upsides capped at 1,375. The recent uptick in global equity markets has stalled the recent gold bull run, and the coup attempt in Turkey over the weekend was too quickly dispelled for any risk-off sentiment to make a significant impact on safe haven asset classes.

Gold remains the safest long play among the asset classes and another move towards US$1,300, which remains a strong support level, will provide good value for a short term to medium-term long strategy.

Of all the asset classes, the star has been global equities. The FTSE100 dropped after the Brexit vote but has since rebounded by more than 12 per cent and now finds itself trading up above 6,600 levels, the highest in a year. A lot of this move is as a result of short covering following the Brexit sell-off and a larger flow into British asset classes following a cheapening pound.

Across the Atlantic, the Dow Jones ended last week above 18,500, with the S&P500 closing above 2,100 levels. These indexes are trading at record highs after three consecutive weeks of gains.

The US equity markets have been in a rampant mood following a stronger than expected US non-farm payrolls report, which showed that 287,000 new jobs were added last month, well above the expected 170,000. The figure bounced back strongly after a disastrous gain in May, in which only 38,000 new jobs were added – this figure was later revised down to only 11,000 in July’s report. The unemployment rate worsened one point to 4.9 per cent on the back of a growing labour force – the participation rate increased to 62.7 per cent.

Perhaps more notably, wage growth slowed in the short term. Month-on-month, growth fell to 0.1 per cent while the longer term reading remained consistent at 2.6 per cent year-on-year.

Although the latest employment report showed slight signs of improvement, the lack of consistency in the figure will keep the outlook for upcoming US growth as cautious at best.

We expect any talk of a US Federal Reserve rate hike this year to continue to fade through the rest of the year and, as a result, risk sentiment and the ensuing volatility will continue, as has been the theme for the first half of this year.

The European Central Bank convenes on Thursday. It will be the first time we hear from Mario Draghi since the Brexit vote. We expect Mr Draghi to follow the BoE governor Mark Carney and leave rates unchanged: benchmark rate at zero, marginal lending facility at 0.25 per cent and ECB deposit rate at 0.40 per cent.

As per tradition, the ECB president will hold a press conference, in which we will get a more detailed view of the ECB’s stance towards further easing. Volatility will no doubt increas


The National

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
SAMBA 26.98 1,138,683
DARALARKAN 13.47 74,648,349
(In US Dollar) Change Change(%)
Gold 1,332.2 -8.6 -0.64
Silver 16.4 -0.21 -1.23
Platinum 923 -9 -0.97
Palladium 929 -3 -0.32
Gold gains as dollar dips, US-China trade tensions escalate

05/04/2018

Gold rose nearly 1 per cent on Wednesday as the dollar dipped and share markets faltered after China retaliated in kind to a US move to slap tariffs on $50 billion (Dh183.5 billion) worth of its impo

Gulf News

Gold forges best run since 2011 as stars align for bullion bulls

01/04/2018

Gold bulls are finding 2018 offers plenty of reasons to be cheerful. Bullion’s wrapping up a third quarterly gain, a feat not seen since 2011, and exchange-traded fund holdings are near the highest

Gulf News

Gold steadies after hitting two-week high

23/03/2018

Gold steadied on Thursday below a two-week high hit in the previous session as the dollar slid after the US Federal Reserve showed a less hawkish stance on rates than expected.

The Fed ra

The Gulf Today

Aluminium hits 3-month low as stocks ramp up, tariffs loom

16/03/2018

Aluminium slid to a three-month low on Thursday, hurt by a rise in stocks, the prospect of looming US import tariffs, and expectations that supply from China will rise as its winter pollution control

Gulf News

Gold edges lower, seen vulnerable ahead of U.S. inflation data

14/03/2018

Gold slipped on Tuesday, pressured by a firmer dollar and concern that US inflation data later in the day will be robust, strengthening the case for more US interest rate hikes.

Analysts po

Gulf News