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Precious Metals

Gold prices and gold-related equities have been caught in a sharp selloff. The motivation behind our early-August profit-taking stemmed from extremely overheated sentiment at a time when the yellow metal was vulnerable to an increasingly more hawkish Fed. Despite rumblings about asset purchase tapering at the ECB and Bank of Japan, we continue to see gold as an excellent long-term play given the likelihood of a prolonged period of depressed real interest rates. We are looking for an opportunity to return to an overweight position, but are reluctant to add just yet given that the Fed still seems intent on tightening policy, which could support U.S. dollar strength. In addition, neither technically overbought conditions nor extreme bullishness have been fully unwound. The bottom line is that near-term policy threats may keep gold and gold shares in consolidation mode for a while longer. Stay neutral, but be prepared to lift positions in the coming months. What's Next For Gold? What's Next For Gold?

It's hard to make a case for attractive returns from any asset class over the next year. We dial down risk a bit but ending our overweight on junk bonds. Investors should pick up yield where they can but without taking excessive risk.

We put the odds of an oil-production freeze agreement between OPEC and Russian officials next week in Algiers at slightly better than a coin toss.

Fed policy - and, importantly, policy expectations' effect on the broad trade-weighted USD (TWI) - will dominate price evolution over the short term, as markets puzzle out if and when a rate hike is coming this year.

Forget about the production-cooperation pact agreed between Russia and KSA over the weekend at the G20 meeting in China. With or without it, rebalancing of the oil market will force global inventories to draw beginning in 2016Q4 and continue into next year, setting the stage for a gradual rise in prices - slightly above our central tendency for WTI of $50/bbl - to encourage more rigs to return to the U.S. shales.

If the Fed convinces markets it is on track to lift rates this year and a couple of times next year, we expect a 10% appreciation of the USD over the next 12 months. This would be extremely bearish for commodities.

Gold stocks have been pummeled since we recommended booking profits on our overweight position on August 1. While the cyclical backdrop of policy and political uncertainty, rampant debt growth and negative interest rates are bullish for the yellow metal, tactical froth remains to be wrung out. The chart shows that flows into gold ETFs have been very aggressive this year, and speculative positions are running hot. Meanwhile, the relative gold share price ratio had reached extraordinarily overbought levels, and overheated conditions have barely been dented by the recent pullback. With the Fed talking tougher, the risk is that any premature tightening in financial conditions through a stronger U.S. dollar will continue to weigh on gold shares. We recommend staying on the sidelines for a while longer and will look to reestablish overweight positions once tactical downside risk has been expunged. bca.uses_in_2016_08_26_001_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_08_26_001_c1

A Fed rate hike by December could erode the slowly evolving fundamentals favoring base metals.

Investors are being forced into riskier asset classes by the TINA effect, but the gaping macro disequilibria makes it difficult for investors to see how we move back to equilibrium in a benign way. Monetary policy on its own is limited in its ability to soften the adjustment, but the good news is that the political pendulum is swinging toward fiscal stimulus.

Investors are being forced into riskier asset classes by the TINA effect, but the gaping macro disequilibria makes it difficult for investors to see how we move back to equilibrium in a benign way. Monetary policy on its own is limited in its ability to soften the adjustment, but the good news is that the political pendulum is swinging toward fiscal stimulus.