Data released in the overnight suggests that global growth is slowing more than expected, weighed on by the fears of a hard landing in China and rapidly slowing inflation in Germany. With the US Dollar’s fundamental posture bolstered after last week’s Fed and NFPs, has the Greenback’s reversal started?
The Japanese Yen has emerged as the top performer in a broad risk-off trading environment to end the first full week of August. The Australian Dollar trails as trade data out of China suggests that export growth is crumbling, a foreboding sign for global growth prospects. Accordingly, expectations for a reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cut by the People’s Bank of China are riding high, which should help stimulate the economy some six-months down the road (typically, rate cuts take around half of one year to cycle into the real economy).
Meanwhile, the Euro’s troubles have continued with a further deterioration against the US Dollar today, on the back of discouraging German data as well as rising bond yields in Italy and Spain. German inflation cooled unexpectedly last month, and at +1.7% year-over-year, it is at its slowest pace since December 2012. Stripping the energy component from the equation, consumer price pressures are a paltry +1.4%. Usually a leading indicator, falling price pressures necessarily suggest a slowing German economy.
Accordingly, with global growth concerns mounting again, and no new accommodative measures definitively on the horizon (though it is looking increasingly likely we will see new stimuli from the European Central Bank and the People’s Bank of China in the near-term, and from the Federal Reserve a few months out), the Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (Ticker: USDOLLAR) appears to be carving out a bottom. On shorter-term charts (hourly, 4-hour), we note that a Rounding Bottom is developing; and given the positive fundamental developments last week (the Federal Reserve holding back on more stimulus and July’s Nonfarm Payrolls report showing the labor market is adding jobs faster than anticipated), we believe the US Dollar is both fundamental and technically constructive in the short-term.
Moving on to credit, the Italian 2-year note yield has moved up to 3.304% (+9.3-bps) while the Spanish 2-year note yield has inched higher to 3.566% (+2.8-bps). Likewise, the Italian 10-year note yield has risen to 5.878% (+5.3-bps) while the Spanish 10-year note yield has increased to 6.806% (+1.9-bps); higher yields imply lower prices.
RELATIVE PERFORMANCE (versus USD): 10:15 GMT
JPY: +0.14%
NZD:-0.18%
CAD:-0.21%
GBP:-0.22%
CHF:-0.25%
EUR:-0.26%
AUD: -0.54%
Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (Ticker: USDOLLAR): +0.17% (+0.37% past 5-days)
ECONOMIC CALENDAR
The economic docket is fairly thin to end the week, with only three pieces of data due to be released in the North American session that could have any influence on price action. At 08:30 EDT / 12:30 GMT, the Canadian labor market reading for July is due. The CAD Net Change in Employment (JUL) is expected to have shown that the Canadian economy added +6.0K jobs, after adding +7.3K in June. Similarly, the CAD Unemployment Rate (JUL) will remain on hold at 7.2%. At 14:00 EDT / 18:00 GMT, the USD Monthly Budget Statement (JUL) is due, and is expected to show a smaller deficit.
TECHNICAL OUTLOOK
EURUSD: The EURUSD continues to creep lower, as anticipated, given the lack of a fundamental catalyst to suggest that further gains are likely (this being the announcement or update on progress of a major bond buying program; or the Federal Reserve suggesting a third round of quantitative easing is closer). A break of 1.2310/30 today suggests the next level lower of buying interest isn’t until 1.2200/20 (former swing levels, ascending trendline off of July 24 and August 2 lows). Nevertheless, there remains scope for a bullish outcome, for the time being. The recent failure above 1.2400 is critical, considering the potential for an Inverse Head & Shoulders off the bottom. With the Head at 1.2040/45 and the Neckline at 1.2400/05, the measured move for this potential reversal would be 1.2760. We will respect this on a daily close above 1.2400/05. A break of 1.2200/20 takes this formation off the table temporarily. Near-term resistance comes in at 1.2310/30, 1.2400/05, and 1.2440/45. Daily support comes in at 1.2200/20 and 1.2155/70.
USDJPY: A pattern long in the making, the USDJPY Inverse Head & Shoulder formation that has been in wait-and-see mode remains valid so long as the Head at 77.60/70 holds. Indeed, it has, and after the Fed meeting and the July Nonfarm Payrolls last week, the USDJPY is constructive in the neat-term, fundamentally. Accordingly, with the Head at 77.60/70, this suggests a measured move towards 83.60/70 once initiated. Near-term resistance comes in at 79.15/20 (200-DMA). Price action to remain range bound as long as advances are capped by 80.60/70. On the hourly charts, it appears a Rounded Bottom is forming (yesterday was the highest exchange rate since July 20), and we are thus biased higher for now.
GBPUSD: The muddle sideways continues, leaving little changed of our outlook for the GBPUSD. Overall, our outlook unchanged from Monday. With the ascending trendline off of the July 12 and July 25 lows holding, our bias is neutral. A daily close below 1.5580/85 (50-DMA) would be bearish, whereas a close below 1.5490/1.5520 would be very bearish (as it would represent a break of the channel as well as last week’s lows). Daily resistance is 1.5615/20 (10-DMA), and 1.5625/40. Near-term support is 1.5575/80, 1.5490/1.5520, then 1.5450/60 (July 25 low).
AUDUSD: The pair’s exhaustion above 1.0600 (failure to see a daily close above said level) has stoked a pullback, and with a fundamental catalyst (Chinese worries), near-term price action is biased lower. Worth noting: the 4-hour RSI broke below 50 today and is at its lowest level since July 25); this suggests that the bullish momentum is waning. Near-term resistance comes in at 1.0535/45 (former swing highs), 1.0580, 1.0600/15 and 1.0630. Given current price, support comes in at 1.0480/1.0500 (weekly low), 1.0435/45, and 1.0380/85.
— Written by Christopher Vecchio, Currency Analyst
To contact Christopher Vecchio, e-mail cvecchio@dailyfx.com
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This article (US Dollar Technically Constructive in Near-term – Is a Reversal Underway?) was originally developed by and is property of American Banking News. Checkout American Banking News for up-to-date banking news and peer to peer lending news.