Citigroup sees gold at $2,000 in 2 years
Federal Reserve will ultimately cut rates all the way to zero.
Singapore: Gold prices may rally to a record above $2,000 an ounce in the next two years, according to Citigroup Inc., which gave a laundry list of positive drivers including rising risks of a global recession and the likelihood that the Federal Reserve will reduce US interest rates to zero.
“We expect spot gold prices to trade stronger for longer, possibly breaching $2,000 an ounce and posting new cyclical highs at some point in the next year or two," analysts, including Aakash Doshi, said in a note received on Sept. 10. That would exceed the record of $1,921.17 set in 2011.
Low or lower-for-longer nominal and real interest rates; global recession risks, exacerbated by US-China trade tensions; and heightened geopolitical rifts, are “combining to buttress a bullish gold market environment," the bank said. Also, “in affinity to our US rates research colleagues, we believe the Fed will ultimately end up cutting rates all the way to zero," the analysts wrote.
Gold hit a six-year high this month as central banks ease policy to address the slowdown in growth amid the trade war. This week, investors expect the European Central Bank to unleash more stimulus, while next week the Fed is seen cutting rates again. That’s helped to drive flows into bullion-backed exchange-traded funds as investors track the trajectory of the US economy.
“For now, the US consumer and potential growth story is holding up," Citi said in the note. However, “we remain more concerned about market signals—three-month to 10-year yield curve inversion—and leading indicators that are weakening at the fastest pace since the Great Recession," it said.
Spot gold traded at $1,491.34 an ounce on Tuesday, up 16 per cent this year after rising for the past four months. Citi said that it had upgraded its baseline forecasts for gold on the Comex by $125 to $1,575 an ounce for the fourth quarter, and by about 14 per cent to $1,675 for 2020.
In July, US monetary policy makers reduced borrowing costs for the first time in more than a decade, and they are widely expected to do so again at their September 17-18 meeting. BNP Paribas, which is also bullish on the outlook for bullion, said it expects four quarter-point reductions over the coming year.
Citi’s outlook did come with caveats, including a hawkish turn from the Fed or a breakthrough in trade talks, although that’s not its base case. “A surprise trade deal coupled with a sharp upturn in global manufacturing data would probably suggest a peak for gold at the $1,550 an ounce level for this cycle."