Yesterday, the equity markets sold off over 2% while the US$ and GOLD moved sharply higher. That’s right, you read correctly, Gold and the US$ moved up together. This action comes as no surprise to the partners of RCM. Over the last year or so, I have explained to anyone willing to listen that the real move higher in Gold prices will occur in spite of or along with an initial move higher in the US$.
One reason the US$ initially moves higher with Gold can be accredited to the carry trade unwind which artificially drives funds back into US$ investments. As an example simply look at the strength of US Treasuries yesterday. As risk is unwound money moves into the relative safely of US Treasuries. I write ‘relative safety’ because as currencies around the world continue to devalue owning US Treasuries will not protect buying power. The only true safe haven in a world intent on currency debasement will be the precious metal Gold and Silver.
I will allow Briefing.com to supply the summary of yesterday’s trading. As you will see they have done an exemplary job…
WRAPX End of Day Summary: Stocks Drop Sharply in High Volume Trade
A high-volume selling effort in response to downgrades on the sovereign debt of Greece and Portugal sent stocks to their worst percentage loss in more than two months, but drove the dollar to its best gain in four months… Early trade was rather lackluster as widespread weakness among overseas markets weighed on mood of morning participants… Data didn’t do anything to improve the mood either. The S&P/CaseShiller 20-City Composite made its first increase since 2006 with a 0.6% year-over-year increase, but that was still weaker than the 1.3% annual increase that had been expected… Consumer confidence climbed in April as the Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index came in at 57.9, which was not only higher than the 53.5 that had been expected, but was the best reading since August 2008…
Weakness quickly worsened when it was learned that credit analysts at Standard & Poor’s downgraded Greece’s debt to junk and cut Portugal’s debt two notches to A-. Subsequent selling pressure sent the Dow down roughly 150 points in just 30 minutes. It even pushed through its 20-day moving average for the first time since February. It was never able to recover and, as a result, finished near its session low…
The wave of selling sent volatility sharply higher. In fact, the Volatility Index made its way up more than 30% to its highest level since February…
Many market participants fled to the dollar for safety. That gave the greenback a 1.3% gain against a basket of foreign currencies. The euro was especially weak as it fell to 1.3179 against the buck. That puts it on par with its one-year low against the dollar…