Gold has reached new all-time highs, surpassing $4,720, driven by risk-averse tendencies amid escalating US-EU trade tensions. Concerns over the US’s trade policies have contributed to a decline in the US Dollar Index by more than 0.8% over the past two days.
The demand for safe-haven assets like gold is increasing. US 10-year yields have hit their highest levels since September, reminiscent of the “Sell America” trend post-April’s “Liberation day”. The 100-period Simple Moving Average for gold remains on an upswing, supporting the bullish trend.
Gold Trading Dynamics
Gold is currently trading at $4,720, with bullish momentum continuing. The RSI is nearing overbought levels at 69.88, indicating potential future resistance around the $4,770 mark, related to the 161.8% Fibonacci extension. Any bearish reversal may find support around $4,640.
The US Dollar has depreciated against major currencies, with the most notable decline being 0.85% against the Swiss Franc. It has also weakened by 0.63% against the Euro and 0.67% against the New Zealand Dollar. However, it has shown strength against the Australian Dollar, though still noting a 0.20% decline.
Given gold’s powerful move above $4,700, the immediate focus should be on continued long exposure to precious metals. This rally is fueled by a significant geopolitical risk event, the US-EU trade dispute, which is causing a pronounced flight from the US Dollar. For derivative traders, this means strategies that profit from rising gold prices and sustained high volatility are favorable.
Market Fear and Inflation Hedge
The market’s fear is quantifiable, with the VIX index having surged over 40% in the last month to close at 28.5 yesterday. Adding to the complexity, last week’s US CPI data showed a surprise jump to 4.1%, intensifying the “Sell America” sentiment and supporting gold as an inflation hedge. This environment makes holding non-yielding safe-haven assets particularly attractive.
We can see that sophisticated investors were positioning for this, as recent CFTC data from the week ending January 13th showed large speculators increasing their net long positions in gold to a 24-month high. This pattern is reminiscent of the 2018-2019 period, where escalating trade tariffs similarly drove a multi-quarter rally in gold. As long as the diplomatic rift over Greenland continues, the underlying support for gold should remain firm.
In the options market, rising implied volatility makes strategies like bull call spreads attractive for capturing upside towards the $4,770 target while defining risk. While the RSI is approaching overbought conditions, this is often a weak signal in a strong, news-driven trend. We would view any pullbacks toward the $4,640 support level as potential buying opportunities, not the start of a reversal.