The US dollar is trading with a softer bias today after the momentum
stalled yesterday. The pullback is shallow but could be extended a
bit more in the North American session. The US reports weekly jobless
claims, durable goods orders and pending
home sales. However, the market already appeared to take on board
that the US economy is rebounding strongly in Q2 and that the prospects of a
Fed hike have increased, but a June/July hike is still not a done
deal. The next important step regarding
market psychology is not today's data but tomorrow's speech by Yellen.
Recall in that in March several regional Fed presidents talked up the
prospects of a rate hike as early as April. Yellen effectively closed
the door on this line at her March speech in NY. Dudley's
comments last week, after the FOMC minutes, likely reflected the views of the
Fed's leadership, and should be reiterated by the Chair.
The interest rate adjustment has stalled alongside the greenback.
The August Fed funds futures contract, which offers the clearest view of a June
or July hike has stalled at an
implied yield of 55 bp or about a 72% chance. As recently as May 16 the
implied odds were closer to 20%. The US two-year premium over Germany
widened from 125 bp after the US employment figures on May 6 to 143 bp
yesterday.
In addition to the dollar's consolidation, the other feature continued
recovery in oil prices. Brent rose above $50 a barrel today, six-month
high. The driver is supply.
The larger than expected draw down of US inventories, coupled with disruptions in Nigeria, Venezuela and Libya are
taking a toll. OPEC meets next week,
but reports suggest attempts to freeze output have been largely abandoned. Although Iranian output is
increasing, it will likely take several more months at least before pre-embargo
levels are reached. Reports suggest
the partial sanctions that have continued, the ease of alternative business,
and a purposeful campaign by Saudi Arabia slow the Iran's recovery.
The higher oil prices are helping energy sector equities and sensitive
currencies, like the Norwegian krone (0.9%), Canadian dollar (0.3%), Malaysian
ringgit (0.5%), Mexican peso (0.3%). The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index
extended its recovery from two-month lows. The regional index has risen
in four of the past five sessions, despite the Fed tightening and the weakening
of the Chinese yuan. Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 is about 0.2% lower
though the materials and energy sector are up (1.0% and 0.7% respectively near
midday in London).
The details of the UK's Q1 GDP were
reported. Growth was unchanged at 0.4%, but the year-over-year
pace slipped to 2.0% from 2.1%. The
composition of the growth was a bit different than expected. Consumption was stronger, but capital investment and
services were weaker, and trade was a bigger drag. Sterling
extended its recent gains to $1.4740. Sterling has only been higher
briefly on May 3 (when its staged a key reversal lows) since the very start of
the year.
Many attribute the sterling's gains to some
polls that suggest the "remain" camp is moving ahead of Brexit.
While there may be something there, we note that one-month implied volatility
is surging today. It was around 11.7% yesterday,
and now indicative prices suggest it is closer to 16.4%. It is the
biggest jump in nearly two decades.
Why has implied volatility spiked? The higher volatility reflects the demand for options. What
options? We look at the pricing skew between puts and calls (25 delta). That skew has exploded.
Yesterday participants were paying 1.25% more for puts than calls. Today
5.4% more. If the polls show a tilt toward remain, why are
investors still buying sterling puts? We suspect puts are being used as an insurance policy, not as a wager of the referendum's
outcome. On the other hand, some put
owners may be using the spot market to neutralize or reduce insurance, which
might be a factor helping sterling. The next key chart point for sterling
is the high from May 3 (~$1.4770), which
corresponds to the 200-day moving average.
The euro is recovering from yesterday’s
$1.1130 low. The $1.1200-$1.1220
area may bring in fresh sellers ahead of Yellen’s speech tomorrow. The dollar was pushed back to almost
JPY109.40 after stalling near trendline resistance yesterday near
JPY110.50. Although the intraday technicals
allow for additional sterling and euro gains, the yen may underperform. The greenback has scope to move higher against the yen. The Australian dollar has resurfaced above
$0.7200. It can move into the
$0.7230-$0.7260 area without challenging the downtrend. Meanwhile, initial support for the greenback
against the Canadian dollar may be seen near CAD1.29, and a break warns of risk
toward CAD1.2825.
Disclaimer
Dollar Softer in Consolidation Mode
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
May 26, 2016
Rating: