Although there is no convincing technical
evidence that dollar's retreat in Q1 is over, we suspect it is nearly complete.
We will be especially sensitive to reversal patterns, divergences with
technical indicators, and other signs that the move is exhausted.
The fundamental economic driver of our medium
term constructive outlook for the US dollar, the divergence of monetary policy
between the major central banks, relative health of the financial sector, and
absorption of capacity, remains intact.
Like most, we never thought the Federal
Reserve would hike rates four times this year, as it had suggested through its
dot plot last December. Yet we think
the market is discounting only one hike
(at the very end of the year), is also mistaken. We are not convinced that the ECB and BOJ have
exhausted scope for monetary easing. We remain concerned of a new flare-up of European tensions later in the
quarter.
The US premium over Germany and Japan narrowed
as the dollar fell in recent weeks. By the end of last week, the
premiums had stabilized and preliminarily began moving back in the dollar's
favor. The widening premiums appear to be a necessary precondition of a firmer
dollar.
The Dollar Index held support near 94.00, but
the bounce was uninspiring and new low looks likely. The mid-October
low was seen near 93.80, and the lower Bollinger Band finished last week
near 93.75. Barring a new shock, we do not expect the Dollar Index to
return to last August's low set near 92.60.
The euro spent most of the last week confined to the ranges set on April 1
when the US March jobs data were released. The range that day was
$1.1335 to about $1.1440. Provided the
$1.1300 area holds, the euro can work a bit higher. Marginal new
highs toward $1.1500 cannot be ruled out. However, there are
preliminary signs that caution against chasing the market here. The RSI
did not confirm the high set on April 7,
and the MACDs are poised to turn lower.
The yen has been a tear. It
rose 2.85% last week and is up a whopping 11.6% since the BOJ surprised the
world by adopting negative interest rates at the end of January. The
dollar fell to nearly JPY107.65 before stabilizing ahead of the weekend.
A head and shoulders pattern on the weekly bar charts projects toward JPY107,
while the 38.2% retracement of the Abe-inspired yen decline, is found near
JPY106.80.
The yen is a stretch
as illustrated by the weekly close below the lower Bollinger Band
(~JPY108.85). However, there have been a few weekly downdrafts of the
dollar that were larger, without sparking an intervention.
We also recognize some preliminary sign that seasonality is playing a
role. Of the past 11 years, the dollar has fallen in seven of the Aprils,
including four of the past five.
Sterling stabilized after testing the $1.40
level in the middle of last week. Nevertheless, three-month (implied)
volatility remains elevated near 16%.
The premium for puts over calls (three-moth) remains near record levels
(~4.6%). This suggests that the
pressure in the spot market may be obscured
by the general weak US dollar profile. Initial support is seen near $1.4040. Sterling can firm
toward $1.4160-$1.4180, but a move toward $1.4250 will likely to bring in fresh
sellers.
Stronger than expected jobs data and the
recovery in oil prices underpinned the Canadian dollar. The US dollar had
appeared to be carving out a bottom against the Canadian dollar. The RSI
and MACDs bottomed in the middle of March, and the downtrend line from the
multiyear high just below CAD1.47 on January 20 was
violated. However, the greenback failed to get much
traction. Initial support is seen
near CAD.1.2925, and then the end of March low near CAD1.2860.
After rallying nearly 13.3% from the middle of
January through the end of March, the Australian dollar is looking stretched
from a technical perspective. There are bearish divergences with the
MACDs and RSI failing to confirm the high at the end of March.
Nevertheless, there was no follow-through
selling after the outside down day on April 7. A move above $0.7580 could
spur a move toward $0.7635. Key support is
seen in the $0.7480 area, and a convincing break would support our idea
that a top is being forged.
May crude oil peaked on March 18 near
$42.50. It fell to $35.25 on April 5. The rebound to $39.85
before the weekend completed a 61.8% retracement of the decline. The 6% rally before the weekend was the largest advance since February. The
technical indicators suggest there is potential to return to the $42.50 high
and possibly toward $44.00-$45.00
The technical indicators are less clear in US
10-year Treasuries, but we suspect that last week's high near 131-09 basis the
June futures contract may have approached what will be the high for the move. The high for the second half of
February was set near 131-14. A
break of the 130-16 area would lend support to the idea that a top is in place.
Regarding yields, the 1.65%-1.68% area may be the low point.
The measuring objective of the "W"
bottom carved out by the S&P 500 in January and February had had a measuring objective near 2100.
The April 1 high was 2075. The technical tone is weakening as the
earnings season begins in earnest (Alcoa on April 11) and during earnings
season, companies, which are among the featured equity buyers, are
sidelined. The MACDs have rolled over, and the five-day moving average is
set to move below the 20-day average for the first time since February
19. The first downside target is
near 2000.
Disclaimer
Little Technical Evidence that Greenback's Slump is Over
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
April 09, 2016
Rating: