Dollar Dips As The Senate Denies Trump Again, Q2 U.S. Growth Eyed

 | Jul 28, 2017 10:31

Market Overview

The dollar is back under pressure after Trump’s disappointing result in the Senate on voting down Obamacare. This comes as markets look forward to a first look at Q2 US growth. The FOMC seems to be adding extra focus on the US data releases in the coming weeks. The balance sheet reduction will begin “relatively soon” as long as the economic recovery continues as expected. That means data surprises will be pounced upon.

Inflation is a concern for the Fed and that helped to drive the dollar weakness on Wednesday. But there has been a bounce back on the better than expected headline durable goods orders. This has helped to pull Treasury yields back higher again and supported the dollar yesterday. The big focus therefore today will be the first reading of US Q2 growth. GDP is expected to have been stronger than the 1.4% Q1 (the first quarter is historically difficult) but there is often a bounce back in Q2. The closely watched Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast has been dropping away in recent weeks as the US data has underwhelmed but interestingly ticked up to expecting 2.8% GDP today, which could mean an upside surprise to the 2.5% consensus. This would have been one of the reasons behind the dollar rebound yesterday. But can it be sustained? Surprises will be pounced upon either way, but Treasury yields are back lower again early today and there is pressure on the dollar again.

Donald Trump’s reform of Obamacare was dealt another blow overnight with a late vote in the Senate that lost by 49-51.

Wall Street closed mixed with the Dow higher, but the S&P and Nasdaq lower. The S&P closed -0.1% at 2475, whilst Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) dropping after hours has put a negative spin on Asian markets (Nikkei -0.6%) and European markets are also looking weaker in the early moves.

In forex, the dollar has come back under a little pressure as Treasury yields have dropped. The yen is a decent performer after Japan CPI was in line with expectations at +0.4% (+0.4% YoY exp, +0.4% YoY last).

In commodities, gold remains stable as it tests $1260 again, whilst oil is just consolidating a touch after strong gains in recent sessions.

Growth in North America is in focus today, with GDP for both the US and Canada announced. US Q2 Advance GDP is at 13:30 BST and is expected to be an annualised +2.5%. This is an improvement on the first quarter’s upwardly revised +1.4%, whilst the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow is also suggesting +2.5% although this has been steadily declining over recent weeks. Canadian GDP for May is also released at 13:30 BST which is expected to be +0.2% for the month.

Chart of the Day – USD/CHF

Dollar/Swiss rallied hard yesterday, forming a strong bull candle that added over 140 pips on the day. The strong bull candle has brought about a key moment for the market, and the bulls are running with it again today. Already a move above a near term pivot at 0.9600 has been an important step, but now, not only have the bulls broken a downtrend channel which has been forming over the past eight weeks (today around 0.9670), but it has also broken through the medium term pivot at 0.9700. This has been a key pivot for several months, initially being a key low in May and then subsequently a key high throughout much of July. Momentum indicators have reacted higher, with the RSI having pushed out decisively above 50 for the first time since mid-May. The next day following such a strong candle can often bring a retracement, but the bulls are pushing on. A closing breakout above 0.9700 would open the late May high at 0.9808, but more importantly the old big floor at 0.9850. The bulls will be disappointed not to hold on to the breakout of the channel (at 0.9670) and a failure would mean that the pivot at 0.9600 is back in play. Holding to this support will be key for the bulls.

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