Abstract:A review of the Federal Reserves balance sheet confirms that the trend of gradual liquidity withdrawal has been established. Bank reserve balances have declined for three consecutive weeks, signaling
A review of the Federal Reserves balance sheet confirms that the trend of gradual liquidity withdrawal has been established. Bank reserve balances have declined for three consecutive weeks, signaling that the current ample liquidity environment is set to narrow. Yet, financial markets remain largely unshaken—gold and equity indices continue to hold elevated levels. From a tactical standpoint, I remain cautious: with prices stretched far above fundamentals, limiting downside risk is more important than chasing marginal upside.
Looking at this weeks Fed balance sheet, bank reserve balances fell to $3.18 trillion, down $61.3 billion this week, following declines of $92.3 billion and $17.9 billion in the prior two weeks. Meanwhile, the Treasury General Account (TGA) balance rose to $661.9 billion, reflecting substantial Treasury issuance to replenish fiscal resources.
As liquidity tightens, market volatility is likely to intensify. Bank reserves are the cornerstone of funding-market stability: the more reserves, the steadier the system. This is the key reason behind our more conservative trading stance at present.
On the labor side, as noted yesterday, the structural impact of AI adoption is reducing entry-level job opportunities. Many positions are disappearing altogether, meaning long-term unemployment is unlikely to ease simply through rate cuts.
U.S. August ADP private payrolls rose just 54,000. ADPs Chief Economist noted that hiring momentum was strong at the start of the year but has since been hit by uncertainty. Factors include labor shortages, weakening consumer sentiment, and AI-driven disruption. This aligns with our ongoing view of labor market fragility.
With structural unemployment entrenched, any sharp rise in short-term unemployment only worsens labor market dynamics. Initial jobless claims rose to 237,000 this week, while continuing claims climbed to 1.94 million. The four-week average of initial claims has now posted three consecutive weeks of upward slope.
Because jobless claims are updated weekly, they serve as a timely gauge of labor-market conditions. Persistent increases directly affect consumer demand patterns. As we have argued in prior notes, discretionary spending—especially on highly elastic goods—is likely to soften as disposable incomes shrink.
On the equity side, current market narratives center on upcoming AI product launches, Huawei‘s new smartphones, and Google’s handset sales. We remain skeptical about whether consumer electronics can sustain peak-season momentum. Instead, it is the prevailing optimism in financial markets that raises red flags for us regarding mounting risk.
Gold Technical Analysis
On the technical front, gold reversed lower yesterday after an overextended rally on the daily chart, pulling back to $3,511 before bouncing. This reflects a corrective move after short-term deviation expanded. The $3,511 level coincides with the 5-day moving average support. Candlestick structure shows a hanging man pattern—a bearish signal marked by a long lower shadow.
Key intraday resistance is seen at $3,552/$3,562. Failure to break through suggests continuation of the downward trajectory. Should a reversal pattern be confirmed at resistance, tactical short positions may be considered, with stops above $3,580.
Support: $3,544 / $3,526
Resistance: $3,552 / $3,562 / $3,578
Risk Disclaimer: The above views, analysis, research, and price levels are provided as general market commentary only and do not constitute the stance of this platform. Readers are solely responsible for their own decisions. Please trade with caution.