Leaving aside the defeat in the World Cup,
last week was good for the US. Auto sales and US jobs data
were stronger than expected. These provided a nice sedative for some anxiety over
the steep contraction in Q1 and the decline in real consumption in April and
May.
On the other hand, the euro zone PMIs
were, well, meh. The ECB continues to emphasize its
policy divergence from the US, though it will take on more organizational
qualities, like meetings every six weeks rather than monthly, some record to be
published afterward, and a modest rotation of central bank voting, as the Federal Reserve/
A collapse in overall household spending
in Japan in May and BOJ Kuroda's warning that inflation will likely ease over
the coming months means that Japan's monetary spigot remains wide open for as
far as the eye can see. The BOJ is buying twice the dollar amount of assets as the Federal
Reserve to aid an economy a third of the size.
The yen appreciated by almost 4% against
the US dollar in H1. Despite the clear reminder that the
size of base money growth, or central bank balance sheets, does not simply
translate into foreign exchange prices, many still expect the euro to decline
through this channel. The ECB met last week with the euro actually higher
against the dollar than when it met in May and announced cuts it is rate
corridor, including a negative deposit rate. In May, the ECB estimated that its
TLTRO facility could add around 400 bln euros initially. Last week, it
was the overall program that was emphasized and this was estimated to be around
one trillion euros.
The dollar rose against most of the major
currencies last week.
The Dollar Index held important technical support near 79.70 early in the week.
By the end of the week, it was approaching the lower end of a band of
resistance that extends from 80.30-80.45. A move above there would
signal scope toward 81.00.
Sterling and the Canadian dollar were the
two exceptions to the dollar's firmer tone, gaining about 0.7% and 0.3% respectively. Sterling was helped by strong PMI data and conviction
that the BOE will be the first to hike rates. Many economists seem to be
over-correcting. After seeing the first hike in H2 2015, as the BOE had
seemed to guide, a number of forecasts now call for late 2014.
Given that sterling's appreciation on a
trade-weighted basis (~4.3% in Q2) is tantamount to some tightening, average
earnings growth that is practically non-existent, and a CPI that is likely to
fall in the coming months, we continue to think Q1 15 offers the most likely
window for the first hike.
Against the dollar, sterling has rallied a
nickel in five weeks and reached its best level since 2008. It rose each of the five sessions
last week against the euro to trade at two-year highs. It is
in need of some consolidation.
Initial support is seen in the
$1.7090-$1.7100 area. A break of this support area, which
contains retracement targets and a two-week trend line, could shake out some of
the weak longs. Buyers can be expected to emerge on dips, and this may limit
the pullback to another half cent.
Sterling does not appear as stretched
against the euro as it is against the dollar, from a technical perspective. Long sterling against the euro is a high confidence
trade among leveraged participants. The euro is expected to continue to trend
lower to reach the low from July 2012 near GBP0.7755. It had reached
GBP0.7920 before the weekend. A bounce toward GBP0.7960-80 would offer a
new entry opportunity.
The Canadian dollar's advance was partly
continued momentum from the stronger than expected retail sales, and CPI
reports the previous week (June 20). It also was a question of market
positioning as the stale bears capitulated. It did not appear that the Canadian
asset markets were the primary attraction.
The US dollar set a base last week in the
CAD1.0620-30 area. The technical indicators we use
suggest a low is near, but they would not rule out another push that could
extend toward CAD1.0580-CAD1.0600. On the upside, a move back above
CAD1.0720-40 would likely confirm a low is in place.
The strong US data and the push from the
ECB made the euro's downside the path of least resistance, especially given
that the euro reached a 6-week high (just above $1.3700). Our reading of the technical condition is consistent
with our assessment that neither the US jobs data nor the ECB meeting was game
changers. This means the euro will likely remain range bound. The
narrow range may be something like $1.3570-80 to $1.3630-45. The broad
range is $1.3500-$1.3700.
US 10-year yield rose last week, and this
appeared to encourage dollar buying against the yen. The 10-year yield approached 2.70%,
its highest level since late April. The dollar resurfaced above its
200-day moving average (~JPY101.80) to almost reach JPY102.30, its best
level in two weeks, However, US yields fell back off and finished the
week just below 2.64%. This sucked the momentum from the dollar, and it
was left straddling the JPY102.00 area. That might be the range in the
days ahead: JPY101.80-JPY102.30.
An evaporation of domestic and foreign
demand, as evidenced by the larger than expected drops in both retail sales and
exports, coupled with the continued jawboning by the central bank, managed finally
to turn back the Australian dollar, but not before it reached new 7-month highs
just above $0.9500. The RSI is neutral, and the MACDs are
crossing down. The 5-day moving average is poised to cross below the
20-day average in the days ahead.
We suspect there are many late longs that are
trapped amid recent talks of a move back to parity. This suggests that bounces will be sold, but a break of
$0.9320 may force selling in the hole. Even if, as we suspect, the
Australian dollar is in a broad trading range, the lower end of it is still at
a distant (given the low volatility) $0.9200.
The head and shoulders pattern that dollar
has carved out against the Mexican peso in June remains intact, though it is not looking particularly promising. The month-end/quarter-end, the US
jobs data followed by the US holiday clouded the price action. To
strengthen this pattern, the dollar needs to fall back below the neckline near
MXN12.96. A move now above MXN13.05 would likely negate the pattern,
whose price target is back in the MXN12.80 area.
Due to the US holiday, the Commitment of
Traders Report was not available.
Dollar Technicals not as Strong as Fundamentals
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
July 05, 2014
Rating: