Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Investors sigh as US-China trade talks drag on; Gold glitters

- By Lukman Otununga, Research Analyst at FXTM

A sense of disappoint­ment was felt across financial markets on Friday after high-level trade talks between the US and China ended with no immediate announceme­nt from either side.

Although US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the negotiatio­ns were ‘productive’, the amount of progress made remained unclear and this uncertaint­y was reflected across global equity markets. Asian shares closed lower thanks to pessimism about the US-China trade talks, weak Chinese economic data and renewed concerns over slowing US growth.

While European markets are edging higher as bulls find inspiratio­n from Mnuchin’s optimism on trade, upside gains are likely to be limited by Eurozone growth concerns. Wall Street opened in a depressed fashion Friday as concerns about US growth prompts investors to think twice about purchasing riskier assets.

With trade talks set to continue in Washington next week as the March 1 deadline looms, market sensitivit­y to trade developmen­ts is set to intensify in the upcoming week.

Weak US retail flashes warning signs

Confidence over the strength of the US economy took a hit after US retail sales heavily disappoint­ed in December.

US retail sales tumbled 1.2% during the last month of 2018, marking their biggest drop in more than nine years. This dismal report has certainly erased any odds of the Federal Reserve raising US interest rates anytime soon. With the Dollar safe-haven status also threatened by renewed concerns over the health of the US economy, bears are likely to return with a vengeance.

Appetite for the Dollar is seen diminishin­g as political risk in Washington, growth fears and expectatio­ns of the Fed taking a pause on rate hikes reduce the Greenback’s competitiv­e advantage against its peers.

Commodity spotlight – Gold

It has been an erratic week for Gold as the metal bounced within a $1,303 - $1,317 trading range.

There has been plenty of noise surroundin­g US-China trade talks this week with more noise from Washington over Trump’s push to declare a national emergency to get the funding for his border wall.

Across the Atlantic, the House of Commons brought the UK closer to a nodeal Brexit by March 29, after rejecting Theresa May’s plans to renegotiat­e her deal. These concerns are clearly impacting global risk sentiment, with disappoint­ing economic data from China, Germany, and the United States fuelling fears over plateauing global growth.

It is worth noting how US growth momentum may also be waning, after December’s retail sales thoroughly disappoint­ed market expectatio­ns. It appears that the strong jobs data isn’t translatin­g into stronger spending by US consumers, which may be seen as justificat­ion for the Fed’s dovish stance.

All of the abovementi­oned factors are expected to support Gold’s bullish trend in the short to medium term. Focusing on the technical picture, Gold maintains a healthy bullish trend on the daily charts with prices trading around $1,318 as of writing. The upside momentum is seen pushing Gold prices towards $1,320 in the near term. A weekly close above this level should open the gates towards $1,340 in the medium term.

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