|

The jury is in: the dollar only corrected, long live King Dollar

  • US Retail Sales mostly met expectations, but revisions were to the upside.
  • The US Dollar was already on the move ahead of the release on higher yields

The US Retail Sales report was only an excuse. The real story is the resumption of the rally in 10-year yields. US yields are above 3.05%, the highest since 2011. The upward move began ahead of the release of Retail Sales and extended afterward. The US Federal Reserve is on course to raise rates, the supply of bonds is rising due to tax cuts, and the US Dollar reacts with a rally.

The Trump Administration's landmark cuts in taxes were not met by spending cuts. On the contrary: the US Congress decided to make everyone happy with funds for every need.

All in all, the US needs to raise more money in the markets, which means an elevated level of bond issuance. More bonds = lower value = a higher yield.

What about the US consumer? The American economy is centered around consumption, and the publication is a top-tier one. The most critical data, the control group, was up 0.4% in April as expected. However, the data for March was revised up from 0.4% to 0.4%. The headline sales number had the same story: 0.3% as expected but the previous figure was revised up from 0.6% to 0.8%. Only the core measure missed with 0.3% against 0.5%, but it was fully countered by an upgrade from 0.2% to 0.4% of the previous data.

Markets usually focus on the latest data and not the revisions, and for a good reason: the most recent trend is more important than the overall number. Also, these revisions were not earth-shattering ones. 

It looks like the greenback was looking for an excuse to gain further ground and upward revisions were good enough.

The moves today, May 15th, following five days of consolidation. The US Dollar was hit by the US inflation report, which came out slightly below expectations and came on top of a disappointing Non-Farm Payrolls report. Yet after the retreat and the consolidation, US yields freshened up and increased their gains. The US Dollar follows.

For emerging markets, the upswing of the Dollar is terrible news as many items are denominated in the US currency. For Europe and Japan, a stronger USD is good news for exporters and for central banks fighting to push inflation higher. 

Will this continue? There are no more figures of the same magnitude this week. However, geopolitics provide quite a few headlines and could determine the next move for the greenback.

Author

Yohay Elam

Yohay Elam

FXStreet

Yohay is in Forex since 2008 when he founded Forex Crunch, a blog crafted in his free time that turned into a fully-fledged currency website later sold to Finixio.

More from Yohay Elam
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD flies to two-week highs, targets 1.3400

GBP/USD trades well above the 1.3300 barrier on Thursday as the Greenback comes under renewed selling pressure following a softer-than-expected US NFP report in June. Meanwhile, Cable extends its multi-day recovery and looks to challenge 1.3400 sooner rather than later.

EUR/USD climbs to multi-day highs near 1.1440

EUR/USD advances to the 1.1470 area, or multi-day peaks, on Thursday. The pair’s marked recovery comes in response to the broad US Dollar pullback, as investors continue to assess the latest NFP data and the persistent sell-off in USD/JPY.

Gold hits six-day tops past $4,100

Gold extends its bullish momentum on Thursday, climbing above the $4,100 mark per troy ounce to reach its highest level in a week. The precious metal’s sharp rebound comes as the US Dollar retreats following disappointing US NFP data.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP steady rebound as US and Iran conclude positive talks in Doha

The cryptocurrency market broadly rises on Thursday, reflecting improvement in risk sentiment following an extended period of selling pressure. Bitcoin is back above $60,000 after testing support at $58,000 earlier in the week.

The market may no longer be giving the Magnificent Seven a free pass
For much of the past three years, investing has felt surprisingly simple. Whenever markets stumbled, investors knew where to look. Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta and Tesla repeatedly led Wall Street higher, shrugging off inflation fears, higher interest rates and geopolitical shocks.
Kevin Warsh offers no policy clues: Why markets still got their answer

Financial markets came to Sintra looking for clues about the Federal Reserve's (Fed) next move. They largely left with confirmation that Fed Chair Kevin Warsh intends to make those clues much harder to find.