The US dollar and yields surged as the divergence meme, which had been increasingly doubted, returned with a
vengeance. The 271k rise in nonfarm payrolls
was most this year. The 2.5% year-over-year increase in average hourly earnings
is the most in six years.
Begrudgingly, the
market has come around to recognize the possibility, neigh the likelihood of a Fed rate hike next month. Despite the vagaries of the
inventory cycle, the US economy continues to show what for many is a surprising resilience to
the global headwinds. At the same time, the ECB still appears to be
laying the groundwork for an expansion of its unorthodox monetary policy. The
Bank of England has poured cold water on
speculation that it would raise rates in the first part of 2016.
The Bank of
Japan showed it is not in a hurry to step up its aggressive asset purchase
program, but disappointment with the spring wage round could force a re-visit
of the issue toward the beginning of the
next fiscal year. In any event, it continues to purchase
assets at an unprecedented pace.
The Dollar
Index has rallied nearly 6% since the middle of October and is within 1% of its
March high (~100.40). Recall that it rallied from around
the middle of 2014 through March of this year. It moved lower from March
through August but held the minimum
retracement (38.2%) on the pullback. The subsequent price action looked
to us to be corrective in nature and not the end of the bull run that so many
investors and observers had heralded. Short-term technicals may be stretched. Initial support is seen near 98.00, but given the prospects for
ECB easing a fortnight before the Fed hikes, dips in the Dollar Index will
likely be bought as long dollar positions previously reduced are re-established.
The euro fell
about 2.4% against the greenback last week. This
is a little less than half of the (~5.2%) decline recorded since the eve of the ECB's October 22 meeting.
It is not just that the ECB is preparing to ease policy further (with a
possible rate cut as well as adjustments to its asset purchase program), but it
is also that the Fed will be hiking. It is when both sides of the
equation are moving in opposite directions that has the potential for the
greatest impact.
The euro was pushed through the $1.08 support that held
over the spring and summer. This area should now act as
resistance. The next obvious target is the $1.0525-$1.0550 area on the
way the multi-year low set in March just
below $1.0460. Outside of the lower Bollinger Band (~$1.0705)
that had been approached, the other
technical indicators and market positioning does not appear stretched.
Still, given the light data schedule and the dramatic adjustment to interest rate expectations, some
nesting/consolidation should not be surprising.
The euro's
50-day moving average crossed below the 200-day moving average in early October
for the first time since July 2014. The turning of the so-called Golden
Cross is a function of roughly six-month
consolidation after a nine-month slide. With some conservative assumptions, the
cross can turn higher over the next couple of weeks.
The strong US
employment data lifted the dollar through the top of its nearly 2 1/2 month
trading range against the Japanese yen. It finished the week above JPY122.00
for the first time since late August. The greenback had risen by about 4.65% against the yen since
the middle of October when the dollar's
leg-up began. It has been such a sharp move that the dollar shot through
the top of its Bollinger Band (~JPY122.65). Given the breakout that area may serve as initial support.
The next
chart-based resistance area is seen in
the JPY124.00-JPY124.50 area. The top of that range corresponds to
the trend line drawn off the multi-year high set in June (~JPY125.85) and the
August high (~JPY125.30). The dollar's 50-day moving average moved below
the 200-day average in October for the first time since the end of Q3 2014. This too seems to be a function of
the extended sideways corrective activity. The cross can turn higher
again later this month.
Sterling's 2.5%
slide against the dollar last week was its worst performance in eight months. The divergence theme was in play. The BOE may be further behind the Federal Reserve in raising rates than many had anticipated. The Bank of England's Quarterly Inflation Report
prompted investors to push out in time when it could raise interest rates.
Sterling posted
an outside down week. It began with a new push toward
$1.55, which faltered despite favorable PMI reports. The unexpected
dovishness from the BOE caught many short-term traders leaning the wrong way
and sent sterling down by a couple of cents. The strong US jobs data was worth another cent and three-quarters or so.
At $1.5090, sterling retraced 61.8% of its recovery off the year's low recorded in April
(~$1.4565). The $1.50 area held on the initial test. A break could
spur another cent decline.
The Canadian
and Australian dollars fared the best in the face of the greenback's surge. The Canadian dollar fell 1.6%.
The two-year interest rate differential continued to widen in the US favor, and oil prices fell. Although the
S&P 500 posted a small gain on the
week, Canadian shares fell, edging out the UK's FTSE as the worst performing
bourse in the G7 last week.
The US dollar
rose through the late-October highs near
CAD1.3280 to approach the bottom of the next resistance area seen
(CAD1.3320-CAD1.3350). The multi-year high recorded in
late-September just below CAD1.3490 is the key. If the pullback in the
first half of October were just a
correction, as we have argued, then a new dollar high should be seen.
The Australian
dollar fell 1.3% last week. The Reserve Bank was more optimistic
about the economic outlook, but another rate cut cannot be completely ruled out At the same time, the likelihood that
the Fed's lift off may be a little more than a month away took its toll.
The Aussie finished the week back below the monthly trendline that goes
back to 2001. It has been trading on both sides of it as its sharp losses
that began at the start of H2 14 were
consolidated. It comes in this month near $0.7130 and corresponds
now to the 50 -day moving average. Ahead of it, resistance should be
expected in the $0.7080 area.
On the
downside, if the correction is over, the September low a little below $0.6900
is the target, though initial support may be
seen near $0.6940. That said, we note that the Aussie
has slipped through the bottom of its Bollinger Band (~$0.7040).
After a
promising start to the week, light sweet crude oil finished poorly. Concerns about supply disruptions in
Libya and Brazil faded in the face the continued building of US inventories. Technical indicators warn of
downside risks. Initial support is seen
near $43.90 (basis the December contract) and then $43.00-$43.40, before the
late October low near $42.60 comes into view.
US 10-year
Treasuries staged a large move. The 10-year yield was flirting with
the 2.0% level as recently as October 27. Yields rose 18 bp last week,
with the jobs data at the end of the week spurring a little more than half the
move by itself. The yield punched through 2.30%, which also housed the
mid-September highs. Assuming that the breakout is sustained, the next important target is in the 2.40%-2.45% area
before the 2.50% psychological level. The challenge is that the rise in US yields may exert an upward pull on other countries' interest rates before their economies justify it.
The December futures contract finished below its lower Bollinger Band (126-11), suggesting the market is over-stretched, but something a short bout of consolidation could fix. Technically, the Dec futures appears headed into the 124-125 range.
The December futures contract finished below its lower Bollinger Band (126-11), suggesting the market is over-stretched, but something a short bout of consolidation could fix. Technically, the Dec futures appears headed into the 124-125 range.
The S&P 500
closed higher for the sixth consecutive week, but the technical tone is
fragile. The RSI is turning lower. The
MACDs are about to cross lower. The Slow Stochastics has been sideways to
lower since mid-October. Since this leg up began in late-September the
Wednesday-Friday slippage, while not major, is the longest a correction has run
before new highs were made. The
initial downside risk is toward 2068 and then 2053. During this
corrective phase, the S&P shouldn't close back above 2100.
Disclaimer
Fundamental Divergence Spurs Dollar's Technical Strength
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
November 07, 2015
Rating: