China's Ninth Straight Month of Gold Holdings Increase; Oil Resilient Despite Russian Tanker Incident; Dollar Supported by Bond Supply Concerns

Crude prices are lower following a surge in the US dollar and as Saudi Arabia anticipates a bumpy road for the crude demand. The Saudis are raising prices across most of Asia and Europe, with the Arab light crude only being boosted by 30 cents, which was less than the 50-cent rise expected by traders. The initial rally from news that a Russian oil tanker was damaged only provided a brief rally on Sunday night. Unless we see a meaningful disruption to crude supplies, prices will remain
Also dragging oil prices down is the rising expectations that the US will see a recession by the end of 2024. A Bloomberg investor poll showed two-thirds of 410 respondents expect a recession by the end of next year and 20% see one by the end of this year.
Gold prices are struggling here on a strong dollar and as global bond yields rise and after an early round of Fed speak are still supporting the case for one more hike by the Fed. Wall Street is playing close attention to fixed income at the start of the trading week, which saw the bond market selloff cool at the end of last week after a mixed nonfarm payrolls report. If Treasury yields rally above last week’s high, that could trigger some technical buying and that could be very negative for gold prices.
For many traders, this week is all about inflation data and any hot surprises could prove to be short-term bearish for gold. As earnings season wraps up, stocks have mostly posted better-than-expected results (excluding Apple) and that has hurt the gold’s safe-haven appeal. At some point over the next few weeks, if the stock market rally can’t recapture the summer highs, a decent pullback could help trigger a big move back into gold.