|

Dollar Jumps, Triggers Reversals - Is this a Bottom?

Since the beginning of the month we've seen broad based gains in the U.S. dollar but as the greenback continued to fall and investors adjusted expectations for Fed tightening, currency traders have been yearning for a turn - and that's exactly what we saw today.  U.S. stocks eased off year to date highs and the dollar rebounded against most of the major currencies. The only currency that continued to rise against the  U.S. dollar was the New Zealand dollar.  The smaller than expected increase in U.S. jobless claims helped but it has been a while since this report had any meaningful impact on the greenback.  So the question now is whether today's reversals will turn into a top for high beta currencies and a bottom for the dollar. 

Unfortunately we don't think that we've seen the bottom in the U.S. dollar because Treasury yields continued to fall with 10-year rates hitting its lowest level since February.  The Federal Reserve meets next week and the Fed fund futures which are pricing in 0% chance of tightening in June and only an 18% chance of tightening in July are telling us that investors expect cautiousness and hesitancy from the FOMC statement and Janet Yellen.  Based on the tone of her speech this week, there's a reasonable chance that Yellen will disappoint dollar bulls. Even if she ends up being more hawkish than expected the dollar should fall in the lead up to the monetary policy announcement as the chance of a summer rate hike fades with each passing day.  The University of Michigan's Consumer Sentiment index is scheduled for release tomorrow and between this month's terrible non-farm payrolls report, the rise in gas prices and the drop in confidence reported by IBD/TIPP, U.S. consumers have very little to be optimistic about. 

The euro rejected the 1.1400 level overnight, trading as low as 1.1304 during the North American trading session.  Eurozone data was better than expected with Germany's trade surplus dropping to 25.6B instead of 21.3B expected. Exports were flat instead of falling and imports declined. The current account surplus also narrowed less than expected.  ECB President Draghi didn't have anything particularly insightful to say - he simply expressed his desire to see other policies (namely fiscal policy) be aligned with monetary policy. Other ECB officials including Villeroy have been stressing the central bank's easy policy and warning that "as long as inflation is too low we must take action."  However despite the euro's weakness there have been buyers at 1.1300, where we have the 50-day SMA. 

Sterling also ignored economic fundamentals with the currency falling despite a healthier trade balance report.  At this stage none of our readers should be surprised by the currency's disregard for data.  The 1.43 to 1.48 trading range and Brexit is all that matters. With exactly 2 weeks to go before the E.U. referendum the polls are still too close to call and that worries a lot of GBP traders who understand that the greatest risk is if the U.K. votes to leave the Union.  However many banks and forex dealers are raising their margins on GBP and other related currencies ahead of the referendum which means we could also see a short squeeze in GBP/USD ahead of the June 23rd vote.

The best performing currency today was the New Zealand dollar, which soared against all major currencies. The move was a direct result of the RBNZ's decision last night to keep interest rates unchanged and Central Bank Governor Wheeler's concerns about house price inflation.  Wheeler said "at this stage we don't need further monetary stimulus for the economy," because they want to see house prices slow significantly.  This is a direct response to the REINZ and QZ reports of double digit house price growth in the month of April and until prices start to moderate, the RBNZ will be reluctant to lower interest rates again. To be more specific, the RBNZ is done easing for the time being making the stability of NZ interest rates an attractive carry play.

The Australian dollar failed to participate in the rally, rejecting 75 cents for the second day in a row.  We still believe AUD is a buy on dip for the same reason why NZD is attractive but AUD/NZD selling and the recovery in the dollar could take the currency pair briefly below 74 cents.

USD/CAD is in play tomorrow with Canadian employment numbers scheduled for release. No one should be surprised that the Canadian dollar is trading lower today with the greenback climbing against many major currencies because the rise in dollar also drove oil prices lower.  Crude traders are now watching oil prices closely to see if the $50 resistance turned support level will hold. The latest economic reports from Canada were better than expected with the capacity utilization rate and new housing price index moving higher. However the most important release for Canada this week will be tomorrow's employment report.  According to IVEY PMI, more jobs were lost in the manufacturing sector but last month's report was already very weak so a downside surprise would mean two months of negative job growth and an increase in the unemployment rate - a situation that will definitely set a near term top in the Canadian dollar and renew expectations for Bank of Canada easing. 

Author

Kathy Lien

Kathy Lien

BKTraders and Prop Traders Edge

More from Kathy Lien
Share:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD stays defensive below 1.1750 as USD finds its feet

EUR/USD kicks off the new week on a softer note, holding below 1.1750 in European trading on Monday. The pair faces challenges due to a pause in the US Dollar downtrend, with traders shifting their focus to the delayed US Nonfarm Payrolls and CPI data for fresh directives. The ECB policy decision is also eagerly awaited. 

GBP/USD holds steady above 1.3350 as traders await key data and BoE

GBP/USD remains on the back foot above 1.3350 in the European session on Monday, though it lacks bearish conviction and holds above the key 200-day SMA support. The US Dollar holds its recovery mode ahead of key data releases, while the Pound Sterling faces headwinds from the expected BoE rate cut this week. 

Gold climbs to seven-week highs on Fed rate cut bets, safe-haven demand

Gold price rises to seven-week highs to near $4,350 during the early European trading hours on Monday. The precious metal extends its upside amid the prospect of interest rate cuts by the US Fed next year. Lower interest rates could reduce the opportunity cost of holding Gold, supporting the non-yielding precious metal.

Solana consolidates as spot ETF inflows near $1 billion signal institutional dip-buying

Solana price hovers above $131 at the time of writing on Monday, nearing the upper boundary of a falling wedge pattern, awaiting a decisive breakout. On the institutional side, demand for spot Solana Exchange-Traded Funds remained firm, pushing total assets under management to nearly $1 billion since launch. 

Big week ends with big doubts

The S&P 500 continued to push higher yesterday as the US 2-year yield wavered around the 3.50% mark following a Federal Reserve (Fed) rate cut earlier this week that was ultimately perceived as not that hawkish after all. The cut is especially boosting the non-tech pockets of the market.

Solana Price Forecast: SOL consolidates as spot ETF inflows near $1 billion signal institutional dip-buying

Solana (SOL) price hovers above $131 at the time of writing on Monday, nearing the upper boundary of a falling wedge pattern, awaiting a decisive breakout.