KEY POINTS
  • Gold is traditionally used as a hedge against inflation and prices typically move higher as economic conditions deteriorate.
  • However, somewhat counterintuitively, global stocks and gold prices are both seen to be moving higher at present.
  • Michael Howell, CEO of Crossborder Capital, believes the concurrence of the U.S. Federal Reserve and China's central bank both pumping money into markets was "magic news" for the yellow metal.
Twenty kilogram gold and silver bricks sit at the ABC Refinery smelter in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, on Thursday, July 2, 2020.

Global stocks continue to rally as hopes of an economic recovery overcome surging coronavirus cases, yet analysts remain bullish over investor appetite for gold in the coming months.

China's stocks extended gains on Thursday, with the Shanghai Composite index leading Asia's equity markets higher. It comes after Monday's front-page editorial in the state-owned China Securities Journal, which many investors interpreted as an official encouragement to buy stocks.