It is difficult to talk about a weak US dollar
when in recent days it has made new six-week highs against the yen, 14-month
highs against the Canadian dollar, four-month highs against the Australian
dollar, and five-month highs against the New Zealand dollar. It is at
three-week highs against the Chinese yuan and near the upper end of its
two-month range against the Mexican peso.
The trade-weighted indices the Fed tracks are
updated monthly. The Bank of England calculates the effective
exchange rate on a daily basis. It has not fallen since April 24.
Last week was the third consecutive weekly gain and fifth in the past six
weeks.
What appears to be happening is an adjustment
of the European currency complex against the yen
and dollar-bloc currencies. Weak commodity and oil prices are taking
a toll on emerging market currencies. Consider the euro-yen cross.
From around the middle of March through the middle of April the euro sheds 6.6%
against the yen. Since April 15, the euro has rallied 7.6% back. The euro
fell to five-month lows in the middle of April and now is near its best levels
of the year, which itself was the highest
since last May-June.
The Dollar Index is not a trade-weighted
measure of the dollar. It is, as we have noted, heavily weighted
toward Europe, and two of the US largest trading partners, Mexico and China,
are not even included. The gap created by the sharply lower
opening on April 24 remains unfilled. The gap was entered, but not
closed, and the Dollar Index retreated to
the lower end of its two-week range. The MACDs and Slow Stochastics are about
to turn higher. Still, the near-term risk may extend toward 9785, which
is the 50% retracement of the rally since last May's low 91.90. A move
back above 99.30 may be constructive (~ 200-day moving average, and 38.2%
retracement), but the top of the gap is 99.65.
Te euro has risen for
four consecutive weeks to approach an important technical area.
The $1.0980 area is the 50% retracement
of the decline from last year's high,
which was set in early May a little above
$1.16. For the record, the 61.8% retracement is found near $1.1130. Second, downtrend line is drawn off that May 2106 high and the spike
from the US election. It comes into
near $1.1010 early next week, falling about two ticks (one-hundredths of a penny). If it is a measuring gap,
which takes place half way through a move, then the price objective would also be near $1.10.
The technical
indicators are stretched, but only the
Slow Stochastic is set to move lower. The MACDs are
consistent with additional gains. The RSI is firm but below the high from
the end of last month.
The dollar has advanced
against the yen for three consecutive weeks. Since
April 14 low near JPY108, the greenback rallied
4.6% to test JPY113.00. The JPY112.70 area corresponds with the 61.8%
retracement of this year's decline. The measuring objective of the
bottom pattern that the dollar carved would be back toward the mid-March high
near JPY115.50. Still, the RSI is getting stretched;
the Slow Stochastic is poised to cross down, while the MACDs are
trending higher. Former resistance, near JPY112, should now offer
support.
Sterling has gained
against the dollar for four weeks and seven of the past eight weeks.
The Slow Stochastics and MACDs are about to turn lower, though the price action
still looks constructive. The $1.30 area remains within spitting distance, and the $1.3055 is the 38.2%
retracement of the decline since the $1.50 level was last seen in June 2016. Of note, the 50-day
average is poised to move above the 200-day average. Technicians refer to
this as the "Golden Cross" or "Dead Man's Cross ( I suppose
depending which side you are on).
The US dollar posted a
key reversal against the Canadian dollar. The
greenback made new highs since February 2016 after the employment data, but
then was sold off and closed below the
previous day's lows. The first target is near CAD1.3650 and then
CAD1.3575. The RSI has turned lower. The Slow Stochastics are set to do
so, while the MACD's are leveling out. On the upside the dollar stalled
in front of CAD1.38, while the CAD1.3840 is a 61.8% retracement of the
greenback's slide since February 2016 high near CAD1.47.
Weak metal prices and
slowing of China's PMIs may have encouraged the push
down in the Australia dollar through $0.7400 to its lowest level since
mid-January. This area also corresponds to the 61.8%
retracement of the Australian dollar's gains since the start of the year.
Still, with a recovery in copper prices and oil in the North American session,
the Aussie managed to claw back above $0.7400. Resistance is pegged in the $0.7440-$0.7460
area.
Selling pressure on the
June light sweet oil futures contract reached a crescendo before the weekend
when prices slumped to the lowest level since April 2016 near $43.75.
The contract rebounded smartly reaching almost $46.70. This essentially fulfilled a 50% retracement
objective of the last leg down in oil prices that began on April 28 just shy of
the $50 a barrel level. Above there, $47.50 is the 61.8% retracement, and
the $47.75 is a 38.2% retracement of the decline since the April 12 high above
$54. The $49-$50 area may offer a
more formidable hurdle. The speed of the recovery before the weekend warns of
potential bullish divergences with the technical indicators, which did not
confirm the new lows. The RSI turned up,
and the Slow Stochastics are set to
turn. MACDs are lagging.
The US 10-year yield
rose for the third consecutive week. The yield has
risen from 2.16% on April 18 to almost 2.38% after the April jobs data.
The 2.40% area is the next threshold. It is the halfway point of the decline since the March 14 peak (~2.63%).
Better retail sales and an increase in CPI could help underpin yields.
The June note futures pushed through the 38.2% retracement of its rally
since the day before the March FOMC meeting (~125-03) and stopped shy of the
50% retracement (seen near 124-20). The technical indicators are
mixed. The MACDs are headed lower, but the Slow Stochastics appear to be
trying to turn higher.
The S&P 500 eked
out a small gain on the week, which was sufficient to extend the advancing streak for the
third week, and set a marginal new record high. A break of 2380 would be
significant and would point to a near-term top being in place. On the
downside, the gaps left from higher opening on April 24 and April 25 may draw
prices. The gaps are found roughly
between 2356.2 and 2369.20 and 2377 and 2381. The Slow Stochastics and
MACDs are rolling over. The VIX briefly fell below 10.0% on
May 1 to record its lowest level since before the Great Financial Crisis.
Correction of Yen Crosses Generates Conflicting Dollar Pressure
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
May 06, 2017
Rating: