Gold and Silver Outlook for April 22-26

+0.25%
Upside
17.05
Market
17.09
Trefis
GOLD: Barrick Gold logo
GOLD
Barrick Gold

Submitted by Trading NRG as part of our contributors program.

Gold and silver tumbled down again during the previous week. The shift in market sentiment may have been the main catalyst for the tumble in gold and silver mainly on the first day of the week. During last week it was reported that U.S housing starts sharply rose in March by 7%; U.S CPI declined by 0.2% in March while the core CPI inched up by 0.1%; Philly Fed index for April slightly fell to 2; number of jobless claims slightly rose by 4 thousand to reach 352 thousand. These reports didn’t show much change in the U.S economy and thus may have had little effect on previous metals. Bank of Canada kept its interest rate unchanged at 1%. This news didn’t help the Canadian dollar from falling by 1.3% during the week against the USD. Moreover, the Euro fell by 0.47% against the USD. The Aussie sharply depreciated by 2.2%. Will gold and silver bounce back next week?.

Herein is a short overview that outlines the main reports, speeches and events that may affect gold and silver next week between April 22nd and April 26th.

Relevant Articles
  1. Barrick Stock Trades Below Intrinsic Value Despite Firm Gold Prices And A Strong Production Outlook
  2. Why Barrick Stock Is Underperforming Despite Strong Gold Prices
  3. Will Barrick Gold Stock Recover From The Sell Off?
  4. With Gold Prices Firming, Is Barrick Gold Stock A Buy?
  5. Soaring Yields Hit Barrick Gold Stock. Is This An Opportunity To Buy?
  6. Should You Buy Barrick Gold Stock As Copper Production Soars?

Based on the upcoming publications and latest developments regarding gold and silver, the prices of precious metals might resume their downward trend as the week will progress. Gold and silver might start off the week on a positive note to correct their sharp fall from last week, but on a weekly scale the prices of gold and silver might remain weak. If the upcoming U.S reports including: core durable goods, jobless claims, new and existing home sales, and GDP for the first quarter of 2013 will show signs of recovery, they could drag further down the rates of gold and silver. The upcoming PMI reports on Chinaand Euro Area might also pull down precious metals if these reports will show slowdown in the manufacturing sectors in these regions. The shift in the market sentiment may have been stemmed from Goldman Sachs negative outlook on gold, the minutes of the FOMC meeting, Bank of Japan’s decision to augment its asset purchase program, the lower than excepted growth rate in China’s economy in the first quarter of 2013, or other reasons. In any case, investors seem disappointed by gold and silvers’ poor performance, the unrealized inflationary pressures from the Fed’s QE programs, the recovery of the equity markets, and the resilience of the US dollar against leading currencies. This market shift might keep gold and silver from pulling back to their high levels from the beginning of the month. Perhaps another major event in the financial markets (e.g. anotherCyprus like crisis or the Fed augmenting its QE3 program) might push precious metals from their current weakness.

For further reading:

Is the Golden Era of Gold Over?

Weekly Outlook of Financial Markets for April 22-26