Dollars Strong Rally Finds EURUSD, S&P 500 Unresponsive
Talking Points:
- Dollar’s Strong Rally Finds EURUSD, S&P 500 Unresponsive
- Euro Firms Outside of EURUSD, Surge in Investor Appetite
- British Pound Collapses Despite Data
Dollar’s Strong Rally Finds EURUSD, S&P 500 Unresponsive
The return of North American liquidity seemed to bring with it a strong demand for the dollar. The Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (ticker = USDollar) posted the biggest rally of its two-month bull trend in a move that drove the benchmark back to highs not seen in seven months. For those assessing the currency’s performance through the majors, confusion arose with EURUSD’s indifference. Having developed one of the most prolific trends amongst the majors – and in the dollar’s favor – the assumption would be that this pair should have made another thrust down to 1.3000 with the bid for the reserve. This is not a shortfall for the dollar. Rather this was a precarious balance founded in an equally-motivated counterpart. The Euro posted an impressive, market-wide rally of its own Tuesday. Don’t expect this stalemate to last though…
Given the greenback’s innate strength, we have to appraise the progress of its two dominant fundamental themes to see whether we have momentum moving forward. From the ‘safe haven’ perspective, there was another misleading barometer in the form of the S&P 500. As the personification of speculative appetite built on the chase for yield, the index was virtually unmoved on yet another sub-400 million share (low volume) day. However, that wasn’t the full story on speculators’ confidence. Looking at FX-based volatility measures, the one-month implied (expected) activity gauge for the currency market has hit its highest level in four months. Meanwhile, while there is still a considerable gap in the timing for rate hikes laid out by the FOMC and what the market is pricing in; there was a hawkish shift on the day. The US 2-year Treasury yield jumped 7 percent this past session and Fed Fund futures nudged higher, helped along by reports of the strongest pace of manufacturing growth (ISM report) in three years, a two-year high in construction spending and improvement in an economic sentiment survey (IBD). Ahead, the Beige Book is a minor holdover for NFPs, so watch risk trends.
Euro Firms Outside of EURUSD, Surge in Investor Appetite
If EURUSD’s performance was a distorted view of the Dollar’s health, it would similarly give a false read on the Euro. Aside from the benchmark pair, the shared currency gained between 0.6 (EURCAD) and 0.9 percent (EURGBP) versus its counterparts. The source of this strength seemed less bound by data and more a reflection of speculative positioning before significant event risk – the ECB rate decision on Thursday. The only indicator of proper scope on the Euro-area docket this past session was the factor inflation figure for August, which showed a persistent deflationary pressure. The same limited impact is seen in the upcoming session’s listings (service and composite PMIs). What we are likely seeing from the Euro is repositioning (profit taking, hedging, etc) after its hefty downdraft heading into the policy meeting. It is worth noting that the largest Europe ETF (Vanguard FTSE) recorded a record day of volume Tuesday. Is this hedging, speculation, profit taking?
British Pound Collapses Despite Data
Data over this past 24 hours from the UK seems to have raised the profile of the BoE rate forecast. The UK construction activity PMI unexpectedly hit a record high and the BRC’s retail inflation reading marked an unexpected moderation to its deflationary trend. Yet, that seemed to inspire little confidence in the FX ranks as the sterling lost ground to all counterparts – including a 0.8 percent drop for GBPUSD. Ignoring encouraging data is the sign of a ‘bearish’ sentiment. Expect greater impact if the PMI data disappoints today.
Yen Crosses: USDJPY a False Prophet?
There were a lot of exceptional moves this past session, and USDJPY was one of the most headline-worthy. The pair cleared 105 for the first time since January and has reinforced bulls’ confidence that a lasting trend is in place. However, again it is important to separate USDJPY performance from yen cross performance. The dollar’s outsized move and a rally from the Nikkei 225 provided a strong boost for this key pair. Yet, neither the other yen crosses nor other region’s equity indexes backed this move. Momentum is founded on theme, not single players.
Swiss Franc and Australian Dollar Little Swayed by Local GDP Figures
Both Switzerland and Australia released 2Q GDP figures this past session – and neither generated much in the way of consistency for their respective currencies. For the Aussie figures, a modest beat (0.6 versus 0.5 percent expected) offered little consolation to the material downgrade in activity from the previous quarter. For Switzerland, the miss was far more substantial – stagnation rather than growth. However, even that wouldn’t distract the markets from the focus on EURCHF and the march towards the SNB’s 1.2000-floor.
Emerging Market Currencies Unsettled by Rebound in Volatility Alongside Volume
The return of liquidity did little to inspire a return to one of the financial system’s most risky and stimulus-dependent asset classes: Emerging Markets. The MSCI ETF dropped for a third consecutive trading session (0.2 percent), the Bloomberg Sovereign Bond Index suffered its biggest decline in a month (0.3 percent) and the JPM EM Volatility Index jumped 2.5 percent. Volume and volatility are this group’s troubles.
Gold Suffers Major Break on Heavy Volume, Metal’s Volatility Reading Swells
A 1.6 percent drop was gold’s worst performance in eight weeks and unceremoniously drove the market through support on a 2014 ‘wedge’. This heft of this move was certainly amplified by the dollar’s own strength. However, even when we swap out less active currencies as pricing measures, the metal would still lose ground. Given the strength in the FX market’s top two liquidity currencies, limited scope on financial risks and a lingering appetite for yield; none of the checklist items for gold bulls were ticked off this past session.
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ECONOMIC DATA
GMT |
Currency |
Release |
Survey |
Previous |
Comments |
01:00 |
CNY |
Non-manufacturing PMI (AUG) |
54.20 |
Has shown a downtrend in the last three releases |
|
01:30 |
AUD |
Gross Domestic Product (YoY) (2Q) |
3.0% |
3.5% |
Likely to be more influential on the Aussie than the status-quo RBA policy released yesterday |
01:30 |
AUD |
Gross Domestic Product (QoQ) (2Q) |
0.4% |
1.1% |
|
01:35 |
JPY |
Markit Japan Services PMI (AUG) |
50.40 |
Services and composite sentiments showed expansion in July for the first time since March |
|
01:35 |
JPY |
Markit/JMMA Japan Composite PMI (AUG) |
50.20 |
||
01:45 |
CNY |
HSBC China Composite PMI (AUG) |
51.60 |
Economic sentiment from China has again taken a downside after showing some improvement during the summer |
|
01:45 |
CNY |
HSBC China Services PMI (AUG) |
50.00 |
||
07:45 |
EUR |
Markit/ADACI Italy Composite PM (AUG)I |
53.10 |
Sentiment in the Eurozone will be in focus as data from the region has been consistently weakening in recent months and the ECB is due to announce its monetary policy this week. An extended downward trend is likely to add bets for additional stimulus by the central bank, driving the Euro downward. |
|
07:45 |
EUR |
Markit/ADACI Italy Services PMI (AUG) |
52.00 |
52.80 |
|
07:50 |
EUR |
Markit France Composite PMI (AUG F) |
50.00 |
50.00 | |
07:50 |
EUR |
Markit France Services PMI (AUG F) |
51.10 |
51.10 | |
07:55 |
EUR |
Markit Germany Services PMI (AUG F) |
56.40 |
56.40 | |
07:55 |
EUR |
Markit/BME Germany Composite PMI (AUG F) |
54.90 |
54.90 | |
08:00 |
EUR |
Markit Eurozone Services PMI (AUG F) |
53.50 |
53.50 | |
08:00 |
EUR |
Markit Eurozone Composite PMI (AUG F) |
52.80 |
52.80 | |
08:30 |
GBP |
Markit/CIPS UK Composite PMI (AUG) |
58.80 |
The Services PMI figures reported its highest figure since November 2013 last month |
|
08:30 |
GBP |
Markit/CIPS UK Services PMI (AUG) |
58.50 |
59.10 |
|
08:30 |
GBP |
Official Reserves (Changes) (AUG) |
-$616M |
Alternately increasing and falling in the last 7 months |
|
09:00 |
EUR |
Euro-Zone Retail Sales (MoM) (JUL) |
-0.3% |
0.4% |
Year-on-year retail sales has been expanding in a weakening Eurozone this year |
09:00 |
EUR |
Euro-Zone Retail Sales (YoY) (JUL) |
0.9% |
2.4% |
|
11:00 |
USD |
MBA Mortgage Applications (AUG 29) |
2.8% |
Rose for 2 straight weeks for the first time since June this year |
|
13:45 |
USD |
ISM New York (AUG) |
68.10 |
Strongest report since Nov 2013 |
|
14:00 |
CAD |
Bank of Canada Rate Decision (SEP 3) |
1.0% |
1.0% |
Rate decision is coming out on the backdrop of strong employment and GDP figures |
14:00 |
USD |
Factory Orders (JUL) |
11.0% |
1.1% |
Expected to rise the most since the release began, reflecting strong US market sentiment |
GMT |
Currency |
Upcoming Events & Speeches |
03:20 |
AUD |
RBA Governor Stevens Speaks at CEDA Function in Adelaide |
11:00 |
USD |
CEO Energy-Power Conference Day 2 |
18:00 |
USD |
U.S. Federal Reserve Releases Beige Book |
SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE LEVELS
To see updated SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE LEVELS for the Majors, visit Technical Analysis Portal
To see updated PIVOT POINT LEVELS for the Majors and Crosses, visit our Pivot Point Table
CLASSIC SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE
EMERGING MARKETS 18:00 GMT |
SCANDIES CURRENCIES 18:00 GMT |
|||||||||
Currency |
USD/MXN |
USD/TRY |
USD/ZAR |
USD/HKD |
USD/SGD |
Currency |
USD/SEK |
USD/DKK |
USD/NOK |
|
Resist 2 |
13.5800 |
2.3800 |
12.7000 |
7.8165 |
1.3650 |
Resist 2 |
7.5800 |
5.8950 |
6.5135 |
|
Resist 1 |
13.3250 |
2.3000 |
11.8750 |
7.8075 |
1.3250 |
Resist 1 |
7.3285 |
5.8475 |
6.3145 |
|
Spot |
13.0707 |
2.1529 |
10.5535 |
7.7507 |
1.2463 |
Spot |
6.8573 |
5.5796 |
6.1569 |
|
Support 1 |
12.8350 |
2.0700 |
10.2500 |
7.7490 |
1.2000 |
Support 1 |
6.7750 |
5.3350 |
5.7450 |
|
Support 2 |
12.6000 |
1.7500 |
9.3700 |
7.7450 |
1.1800 |
Support 2 |
6.0800 |
5.2715 |
5.5655 |
INTRA-DAY PROBABILITY BANDS 18:00 GMT
CCY |
EUR/USD |
GBP/USD |
USD/JPY |
USD/CHF |
USD/CAD |
AUD/USD |
NZD/USD |
EUR/JPY |
Gold |
Res 3 |
1.3435 |
1.6781 |
103.17 |
0.9123 |
1.0969 |
0.9386 |
0.8543 |
137.87 |
1329.49 |
Res 2 |
1.3417 |
1.6757 |
103.00 |
0.9110 |
1.0953 |
0.9369 |
0.8527 |
137.64 |
1325.18 |
Res 1 |
1.3399 |
1.6733 |
102.83 |
0.9096 |
1.0936 |
0.9352 |
0.8510 |
137.41 |
1320.87 |
Spot |
1.3362 |
1.6684 |
102.49 |
0.9069 |
1.0904 |
0.9319 |
0.8476 |
136.95 |
1312.25 |
Supp 1 |
1.3325 |
1.6635 |
102.15 |
0.9042 |
1.0872 |
0.9286 |
0.8442 |
136.49 |
1303.63 |
Supp 2 |
1.3307 |
1.6611 |
101.98 |
0.9028 |
1.0855 |
0.9269 |
0.8425 |
136.26 |
1299.32 |
Supp 3 |
1.3289 |
1.6587 |
101.81 |
0.9015 |
1.0839 |
0.9252 |
0.8409 |
136.03 |
1295.01 |
v
--- Written by: John Kicklighter, Chief Strategist for DailyFX.com
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