Outlook:

Today the bond market closes early and all markets are closed on Monday for Memorial Day in the US. London is closed on Monday for a bank holiday, as well. We should expect falling volumes all morning and lots of position-squaring. We will not publish any reports on Monday.

We get a lot of data today, which will annoy traders yearning to leave their desks for a three-day weekend, especially urgent because spring was so late this year. First up is durables, expected to show a 1.3% drop. Then the University of Michigan consumer sentiment data, including inflation expectations. We had Feds galore, starting with Chairman Powell (in Stockholm), then a Dallas Fed conference at which speakers include Dallas Fed Kaplan, Atlanta Fed Bostic and Chicago Fed Evans. After lunch, the Baker Hughes rig count.

Probably the net outcome of all this will be fresh talk about the robustness of the US recovery. We had “synchronized” growth pretty much everywhere for the blink of an eye, but then it looked like the US was pulling ahead. Bad data can squash that perception  and draw attention anew to the incompetence in Washington. Market players do not like taking political events into consideration if they can possibly avoid it, but Trump intrudes. We all try to take his buffoonery with a grain of salt, but his disruptions still need to be considered, like the proposed tariff on imported cars this week.

And the dollar is already showing signs of a normal pullback, but when a correction comes just before a major holiday, you have to worry. One year we had a euro/dollar reversal the week of July 4 and once we had a reversal in dollar/yen over the Memorial Day week, so holidays are not to be dismissed lightly. See the daily chart of the yen. We had a corrective move upward to the 62% retracement area, and then a drop. We never know if this means the corrective upmove is over, or will hit some kind of support and the currency will rise again to test the 100% retracement, in this case, 114.74 from November 6, 2017. You can write alternative scenarios to support either forecast. We are betting on the upmove resuming, but not betting very much.

Note to Readers: In case anyone missed it, our absence for a week was due to tornadoes hitting Connecticut last Tuesday and shutting off electrical power and internet access for a full week. We will need to take another week to move to Virginia in early June. Exact dates to come.

This is an excerpt from “The Rockefeller Morning Briefing,” which is far larger (about 10 pages). The Briefing has been published every day for over 25 years and represents experienced analysis and insight. The report offers deep background and is not intended to guide FX trading. Rockefeller produces other reports (in spot and futures) for trading purposes. To see the full report and the traders’ advisories, sign up for a free trial now!

This morning FX briefing is an information service, not a trading system. All trade recommendations are included in the afternoon report.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD edges lower toward 1.0700 post-US PCE

EUR/USD edges lower toward 1.0700 post-US PCE

EUR/USD stays under modest bearish pressure but manages to hold above 1.0700 in the American session on Friday. The US Dollar (USD) gathers strength against its rivals after the stronger-than-forecast PCE inflation data, not allowing the pair to gain traction.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD retreats to 1.2500 on renewed USD strength

GBP/USD retreats to 1.2500 on renewed USD strength

GBP/USD lost its traction and turned negative on the day near 1.2500. Following the stronger-than-expected PCE inflation readings from the US, the USD stays resilient and makes it difficult for the pair to gather recovery momentum.

GBP/USD News

Gold struggles to hold above $2,350 following US inflation

Gold struggles to hold above $2,350 following US inflation

Gold turned south and declined toward $2,340, erasing a large portion of its daily gains, as the USD benefited from PCE inflation data. The benchmark 10-year US yield, however, stays in negative territory and helps XAU/USD limit its losses. 

Gold News

Bitcoin Weekly Forecast: BTC’s next breakout could propel it to $80,000 Premium

Bitcoin Weekly Forecast: BTC’s next breakout could propel it to $80,000

Bitcoin’s recent price consolidation could be nearing its end as technical indicators and on-chain metrics suggest a potential upward breakout. However, this move would not be straightforward and could punish impatient investors. 

Read more

Week ahead – Hawkish risk as Fed and NFP on tap, Eurozone data eyed too

Week ahead – Hawkish risk as Fed and NFP on tap, Eurozone data eyed too

Fed meets on Wednesday as US inflation stays elevated. Will Friday’s jobs report bring relief or more angst for the markets? Eurozone flash GDP and CPI numbers in focus for the Euro.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures