China’s GDP, Brexit in Focus
The drops came after since the early 1990s. The world’s second-largest economy grew 6 percent year-on-year against the forecast expansion of 6.1 percent. The GDP figure was below closest to the expected that led to early gains in the Chinese equities. Nevertheless, investors remained focused on the broader spectrum of the ongoing US-China trade war, which, despite making some advances after the recent trade meets in Washington, looks uncertain to reach a full-fledged deal.My deal with China is that they will IMMEDIATELY start buying very large quantities of our Agricultural Product, not wait until the deal is signed over the next 3 or 4 weeks. THEY HAVE ALREADY STARTED! Likewise financial services and other deal aspects, start preparing…. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump)
Gold, meanwhile, failed to behave as a safe-haven asset for Chinese as it dipped 0.26 percent on profit-taking after the European Union and the United Kingdom worked out a Brexit deal. More likely, trade uncertainties – and doubts if UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson will be unable to secure UK parliament backing on Brexit – capped gold’s downside.
According to Brian Lan, of Singapore dealer GoldSilver Central, gold could remain rangebound unless more clarity on the outcomes of Brexit and trade negotiations surface. He said the yellow metal could trade between $1,475 and $1,503 in the near-term. Meanwhile, Hareesh V, head of commodity research at Geojit Financial Services, said .“Considering the present uncertainties around the US-China trade war and other geopolitical risks, gold still has potential upside,” he told CNBC.
Bitcoin Rangebound As Well
Bitcoin, which investors treat as a new form of Gold, is also trending inside a strict trading range since September 26. The benchmark cryptocurrency’s iconic performance against the trade war and yuan devaluations this year instilled a belief that it is the next-best hedging asset. After surging by more than 150 percent in the second quarter, bitcoin, however, has corrected downwards by more than 43 percent. That, coupled with the rejection of yet another Bitcoin ETF application, has pushed institutional interest in the cryptocurrency downwards.
Someone gives you a $10,000 that you can’t touch for 10 years, would you rather have the 10k gift in — Funky (@Benaskren)
I've been back and forth on it, but I've finally had time to sit down and evaluate 's set up. Short term I'm leaning bull from here, believe it or not. No promises we break resistances stacking up, but confident in at least seeing a retest of mid 9k range. Notes attached — Crypto Thies (@kingthies)
[Disclaimer: The author holds Bitcoin and Ethereum in his cryptocurrency portfolio.]