|

Rising treasury yields attract Dollar interest

The dollar index has been on an upward trajectory since late September. Still, the currency market has been late in joining the move in US long-term bonds, where yields are rising following the Federal Reserve's decisive easing. The idea behind this dynamic, while atypical, is quite simple: decisive interest rate cuts will boost economic growth and inflation in the long run.

Normally, bolder-than-expected monetary easing is a bearish factor. Hence, the typical reaction of the dollar index, which in the second half of September tested the psychological 100 level, below which it spent five days in July 2023 and has not traded consistently below since April 2022.

As is often the case, sustained one-way movements in the government bond market, the so-called smart money, cause other markets to follow the trend. Rising yields have reinvigorated dollar buying, accounting for the 2.5% rise in the DXY in just over a week.

10-year yields have risen above 4% from a local low of 3.6% last month. Technically, yields remain in a downtrend until they break above the 4.4-4.5% range. The market may not encounter significant resistance to these levels, but a break above 4.5% could trigger a strong deleveraging process.

Similarly, the dollar index has light resistance to 105. However, a break above would break the multi-month trend and could strongly accelerate the USD.

For now, the US equity market is in a wait-and-see mode, distracted by the start of the reporting season and hovering near the highs. However, a further rise in yields could well trigger a sell-off in equities, like what happened from July to October 2023.

Author

Alexander Kuptsikevich

Alexander Kuptsikevich, a senior market analyst at FxPro, has been with the company since its foundation. From time to time, he gives commentaries on radio and television. He publishes in major economic and socio-political media.

More from Alexander Kuptsikevich
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD back to 1.3250, down modestly for the day

GBP/USD now comes under fresh downside pressure and recedes toward the mid-1.3200s on Tuesday, partially reversing the optimism seen at the beginning of the week. Meanwhile, Cable’s bearish tone follows the resumption of the upside traction in the Greenback, always amid the sharp rally in USD/JPY.

EUR/USD off tops, back to 1.1400

EUR/USD now loses some momentum and recedes from the area of recent daily tops, revisiting the 1.1400 neighbourhood in the latter part of Tuesday session. The pair’s daily decline comes in response to the resurgence of some buying interest in the US Dollar.

Gold clings to daily gains beyond $4,000

Following multi-month lows near $3,950, Gold now manages to regain some composure and reclaim the area beyond the key $4,000 yardstick per troy ounce on Wednesday. Still, any meaningful recovery appears limited as a broadly firmer US Dollar and rising US Treasury yields weigh on the yellow metal.

Ripple defends critical support, Stellar extends recovery

Ripple (XRP) trades around the key $1.00 psychological level, consolidating as the token awaits its next directional catalyst. Stellar (XLM) extends its recovery above $0.178 after posting modest gains at the start of this week.

Why a hawkish Bank of Japan could trigger the next Bitcoin sell-off

The Japanese Yen hits a 40-year low of 162.00 against the US Dollar, raising concerns about intervention or additional rate hikes by the Bank of Japan. BoJ may sell US Treasuries to buy back Yen, potentially pushing US bond yields higher and making Bitcoin less attractive to investors.

Kevin Warsh isn't expected to say much in Sintra: That's exactly why markets will listen

Financial markets could find an important catalyst in the enchanting, fairytale-like landscape of Sintra this week. The ECB Forum will, as it does every year, gather the crème de la crème of central banks. The new boss at the Fed, who has clearly said that the Fed should stop explaining everything, will need to talk – and traders should listen.