Jobs Day – Just Right


Futures saw little movement as US investors awaited the big November jobs report, in which payrolls were expected to bounce back from October’s hurricane-related weak print. The report was just released, and investors got just about what they expected. Headline jobs was slightly higher than expected (227K vs 220K), and October’s print was revised modestly lower.  The Unemployment Rate ticked up slightly to 4.2% from 4.1% which was a tick higher than expected, and average hourly earnings were up 4.2% y/y versus expectations for 4.1%. All in all, the report had little in the way of surprises.Asian stocks closed out a positive week with a negative bias. Japan, India, South Korea, and Australia were all lower, but China bucked the trend with gains of over 1%. The gains there come in anticipation of next week’s Central Economic Work Conference where investors expect authorities to introduce additional measures to support growth in that ailing economy.European equities are finishing off a positive week with additional gains this morning. The STOXX 600 is up fractionally (<0.25%) taking its gain for the week to over 2%. GDP for the region increased 0.4% which was in line with forecasts, but Industrial Production in Germany unexpectedly declined. French equities are the big winners in the region with a gain of over 1% as Macron insists that he will finish his Presidency through 2027.As mentioned above, investors expected a rebound in the November jobs report after last month’s weaker-than-expected print. While the hurricanes in the south impacted job growth for October, last month’s report was the fourth miss relative to expectations in the last seven reports and the biggest miss (-88K) since January 2022. The market hoped for a better November report… but not too much, and that’s exactly what it got. In response, market pricing for a December cut now stands at just about 90%.Now that everyone has discovered digital gold, is the physical version on its way to becoming a paperweight? After peaking just above $2,800 per ounce at the end of October, gold prices declined as much as 9% to their lows in mid-November, but after a bounce still remain down over 5% hovering right around $2,650 per ounce.A look at the chart shows a delicate picture. Gold broke its uptrend from the summer just after the election and then surrendered the 50-DMA just days later. From that mid-November low, it rallied back above its 50-DMA but stalled out right below its former uptrend line.  These failures at a former key trendline can often signal a shift in trend, and another attempted rally after Thanksgiving has failed at the 50-DMA which is now starting to roll over. The next few days will be critical; it will either break above its short-term downtrend from the October high or below what looks like a very short-term uptrend line from the mid-November low.As is usually the case, the move in the gold mining stocks has followed a similar path, but with wider swings. The VanEck Gold Miners ETF (GDX) was in an upward trending channel for about six months dating back to late May but broke below the low end of that range as well as its 50-DMA just two days after the election. GDX managed to find some support at its 200-DMA – a level it hasn’t traded below since March, but already appears to be running out of momentum and starting to roll over. Judging by the President-elect’s various real estate holdings, no one seems to love gold more than him, but his victory in November hasn’t been good for anything related to gold.Getting back to the original question over whether Bitcoin has become a substitute for physical gold, there are certainly some aspects where it could serve as a substitute. Less than a month ago, though, gold was at record highs, so it will take more than a month of weakness and a decline of less than 10% for us to get the hammer out and start putting the nails in gold’s coffin.More By This Author:Growth, Value, And Dividends
Biggest Winners And Losers Since The Election
South Korea ETF Reaching New Lows

Reviews

  • Total Score 0%
User rating: 0.00% ( 0
votes )



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *