Pre-Open: Gold Catches a Bid at $1335

The  Only Chart That Matters Today?

Some Golden Drivers Today are:

  1. Korean rhetoric
  2. Draghi Rhetoric
  3. Trump potentially announcing a replacement for Governor Fischer
  4. After hitting a 2 year low, the USD will be hostage to the above 3

More on those below

Traders loading their guns for the US open should take note  of this chart. it is currently the best indicator of volatility's cyclical nature in Gold and  is coiling again for an expansion. We'd use this as a natural trade entry point for today. Right here it is telling us a close on either side of $1340 and $1333 in 2:45 minutes will give  a signal to go with the flow and a nice stop out level on the other side.

As we said, Gold is very trade-able now and respects numbers quite efficiently. This may be the last good risk / reward for a while however and we are watching it for entry today. All the pieces are in place. Given  the event list today, "first way - wrong way"  possibilities apply and we are ready for that.

This 4 hour spot chart is what matters to us today as the market bumps up again to a possible area of exhaustion discussed before  here

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Dec Gold chart here

Gold Down, Up, Up, Overnight

Gold is stronger this morning after shrugging off a quick drop on US close post deferral of the debt ceiling drama. Meanwhile, as Trump  attempted to soft talk the North Korean issue off the ledge South Korea's leadership reminded the region of North Korea's next test. Prime Minister Lee Nak-yon warned ominously that there's "not much time left until North Korea is fully nuclear-armed." And reminded people of the North's "expectations of a Sept 9th ICBM missile launch," a public holiday there.

It seems he does not want people to think this situation is anywhere near being over, and in fact is just beginning. Gold pipped higher on that at first but traded sideways afterwards. But at about 2:45 am ET the metals caught a bid to them and haven't given much back.

Gold's 5 minute spot chart shows behavior from post NY close to South Korean alarm bells, to  the buying coming in at around 2:45 AM

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Meanwhile, the Yen resumed its descent in rather orderly fashion around the same time. Pictured below is the 60 minute chart. Readers new to the USD/Yen pair should note a lower priced Yen  means a weaker dollar. 

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Irma marches across the Caribbean, the debt ceiling drama is pushed back, and the ECB meeting looms.

 

Draghi's Dilemma: Anything short of "Whatever it Takes" is Unacceptable Now

We like this comment by Bill Blain of mint.com and will let it stand alone for now:

During the depths of Euro Sovereign Crisis in 2010-2012, the ECB eased these doubts with LTROs and later QE effectively backstopping their debts! (Don’t tell the Germans its defacto debt mutualisation).

This is the real reason why Draghi won’t upset us today with details on how the ECB is going to pull the morphine of extraordinary monetary policy from a market addicted to it. He can’t afford the market to cold-turkey and panic. The risks to Italian bond spreads in particular,  the entire European corporate bond market, and the exposure of Europe’s multitude of SSA guaranteed borrowers wearing the Emperor’s New Clothes, is just too frightening to contemplate. 

The EURO is discounting easy money this morning, and why shouldn't it given the corner Draghi has painted himself into? We do note the occasional hawk like Draghi. But he reverses pretty quickly. The man  is the epitomy of central banker evolution: a clever academic who has drinks the kool-aid on neo-keynesianism straight from the powdered packet. Double down Draghi cannot afford to shrink money supply with a ninflux ofimmigrants that will overwhelm social systems, a trade partner to its east that supplies Germany's energy, and an increasingly isolationist US. We almost feel sorry for the guy. Isn't there  a 12 step program for Central bankers somewhere to get off the "schneid"?

Drama delayed

One impediment to the risk rally this month faded after U.S. President Donald Trump agreed a deal to add a three-month extension of the U.S. debt limit to a bill providing relief for victims of Hurricane Harvey, overruling Republicans who wanted a longer agreement, and siding with congressional Democrats. The Treasury billmarket is now pricing-in stress for the new debt ceiling deadline of Dec. 15, underscoring how fiscal brinkmanship has been postponed, rather than resolved. 

ECB meet

European Central Bank President Mario Draghi is set to give a much-anticipated policy update at 8:30 a.m. Eastern Time, with investors looking for clues on the future of its bond-buying program and any talk of the strengthening euro. The Governing Council has been presented with documents outlining multiple scenarios for adjusting its quantitative easing, according to officials familiar with the matter. Nonetheless, some investors have pared expectations for a tapering announcement despite the economic recovery, citing the euro’s advance, and a decision on how and when to scale back the program likely won't be made until the Oct. 26 meeting. A more hawkish-than-expected pronouncement, signaling the fading era of monetary support in the U.S. and Europe, will test risk appetite for investors around the world, from junk bonds to emerging markets

Fed succession

President Donald Trump has more power to chart the course of the U.S. central bank, after Federal Reserve Vice Chair Stanley Fischer, a godfather of global economic policy, announced his decision to step down mid-October. The U.S. dollar dipped after the news on speculation that the Fed succession plan may head in a more dovish direction. Meanwhile, Gary Cohn, top White House economic advisor and former Goldman Sachs Group veteran, is unlikely to be selected to replace Janet Yellen as chair, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing his perceived veiled criticism of the president’s response to a rally of white supremacists in Virginia.

Markets steady

The dollar hit a two-year low, while the euro rose to the strongest level in more than a week as stocks in the region struggled for direction ahead of the ECB meeting. Tensions over North Korea, Hurricane Irma and the clouded outlook for American monetary policy also threaten to outweigh positive sentiment from the U.S. debt extension in today’s trading session. The Topix index rose 0.4 percent at the close in Tokyo, and S&P futures were down 0.1 percent as of 5:55 a.m. ET.

Hurricane Irma

Irma is heading towards Florida after smashing Puerto Rico as the category five storm accelerates through the Caribbean, threatening to turn into the most expensive hurricane in U.S. history. A mandatory evacuation order has been issued for some areas including downtown Miami and Miami Beach, with Irma forecast to hit by Sunday afternoon. Gas shortages loom, orange juicefutures traded near their highest since May before stabilizing, and reinsurance companies could take a big hit as primary insurers have reduced exposure to Florida in recent years, according to analysts. U.S. airlines are capping ticket prices for passengers fleeing the hurricane.

good luck

 

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