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Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama: No comment on foreign exchange levels.Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama: He held talks with US Treasury Secretary Bessenter after the G7 summit.Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama: There has been no change to the existing agreement between Japan and the United States to take decisive measures. He reiterated coordination with U.S. Treasury Secretary Bessenter in the market.Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama: He held an online meeting with U.S. Treasury Secretary Bessenter on Monday to discuss the impact of global financial markets and the conflict with Iran.On June 23, Morgan Stanleys Chief Investment Officer and Chief U.S. Equity Strategist, Mike Wilson, stated that despite the weakening stock market and flattening yield curve, last weeks FOMC meeting under Federal Reserve Chairman Warsh was a good and necessary first step in rebuilding the Feds credibility. Wilson noted that since Warshs nomination in February, the S&P 500s ratio to gold has risen by nearly 40%, which he believes is a strong vote of confidence from the market in the new chairmans ability to restore policy discipline. The Morgan Stanley strategist pointed out that liquidity, rather than interest rate hikes, is the main risk facing the stock market in the near term. He mentioned that the size of reserve management programs has decreased by about 75% from their peak, and the scale of Treasury repurchase agreements has also shrunk by 50%. Wilson warned that accelerated loan growth has exacerbated the liquidity crunch as the real economy absorbs more capital while balance sheet support decreases. He expects the U.S. stock market to be volatile in July and may experience a correction, with the next round of the earnings-driven bull market delayed until liquidity drag is lifted. Wilson also expressed support for Warshs approach of reducing excessive forward guidance, arguing that the market should react to newly released data rather than trying to predict the Feds statements.

Gold Prices Reversed Direction Following Wednesday's Rally

Alina Haynes

May 06, 2022 10:48

Despite a brief rebound, gold prices fell. The dollar has rebounded from yesterday's heavy losses. After the 50-basis-point rate boost, benchmark yields continued their advances. Following the FOMC meeting, the ten-year treasury yield increased to 3.09 percent.

 

The FOMC raised rates by 50 basis points on Wednesday, but Fed Chair Powell made it apparent that a 75-basis-point boost at the next meeting was improbable.

 

This resulted in a weakening of the dollar, while bond rates extended their advances. Powell indicated, however, that the primary objective is to contain inflation, which provides the dollar and yields with additional upside momentum.

 

Initial unemployment claims increased to 200,000 from 181,000 in the previous week. In the first quarter, productivity declined by 7.5 percent. However, a tightening labor market will maintain a high level of inflation.

Technical Evaluation

Gold prices fell in the aftermath of the Fed's announcement and are again under selling pressure due to risk-on market attitude. Near the 200-day moving average of 1,836 is support. Near the 10-day moving average eat 1,889, resistance is seen.

 

The 20-day moving average has fallen below the 50-day moving average, indicating the onset of a medium-term downturn.

 

Momentum turns negative in the short term when the Fast Stochastic generates a crossover sell signal. Prices are oversold, with the fast stochastic reading 16 points below the oversold trigger level of 20.

 

The MACD has generated a crossover sell signal, indicating that the medium-term momentum has become negative. This occurs when the 12-day moving average minus the 26-day moving average crosses below the MACD line's 9-day moving average.

 

The MACD (moving average convergence divergence) histogram displays a downward trend, indicating that prices will fall.

 

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