Dollar Gains Slip, Sterling Volatile As May’s Deal Faces A Third Vote

 | Mar 29, 2019 08:06

Market Overview

Given the yield curve inversion, the renewed strength of the dollar has been remarkable. Traders seem to be positioned where whatever negative economic implications may be signalled, the US is still an outperformer. Therefore, sell everything else over the dollar.

US final Q4 GDP was revised back to +2.2% which was lower than expected, but with US Jobless Claims falling away again, Treasury yields bounced for the first time in several days and the dollar maintained a position of strength.

There are suggestions that there is room for give and take still in the US/China trade dispute and this has helped to support US equities too. Given the strength of the dollar and a rebound on US equities, this puts pressure on gold, with the yellow metal dramatically falling out of favour yesterday. This now runs the risk of being a decisive outlook changer if the support at $1276 is broken.

Over in the Brexit bubble of Westminster, UK Prime Minister May is set to get her Withdrawal Agreement (minus the Political Declaration this time) voted on for a third time in Parliament today (at 14:30 GMT). Expectation is still for a defeat, but supposedly this is going to be much tighter this time around. Without the support of the DUP and some of its own backbenchers, the government will be relying on around 20 to 30 opposition MPs to come over. A tough ask. The way that sterling sank yesterday, it seemed as though there was a feeling that this could be moving towards a general election if this vote does not pass. In this scenario, it would be sterling negative (unless there was a vote close enough to get an MV4?). As ever, Brexit uncertainty is likely to continue.

Wall Street closed tentatively higher with the S&P 500 +0.3% at 2815, whilst US futures are a shade higher again today, currently +0.2%. The Asian markets looked very strong overnight, with the Nikkei +0.8% and the Shanghai Composite +3.1%. European markets are following US markets with FTSE 100 Futures +0.4% and DAX futures +0.5% higher.

In forex, there is a degree of unwind on the dollar but also with a risk positive feel. Sterling has clawed back some of its losses from yesterday, as has the euro, with the Aussie and Kiwi outperforming.

In commodities, gold remains under pressure whilst oil continues to hover.

Sterling traders will be eyeing developments in Parliament, but will also be keeping one eye on the lookout for the size of the UK Current Account deficit at 09:30 GMT today. Expectation is that the deficit in Q4 2018 will have reduced to -£23.09bn (from -£26.5bn in Q3 2018). The UK final Q4 2018 GDP is also at 09:30 GMT and is expected to remain at +0.2% (+0.2% at the second reading) with the year on year GDP at +1.3%.

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The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure, the core Personal Consumption Expenditure (core PCE) is at 12:30 GMT and is expected to grow by +0.2% in January which would keep the year on year reading at +1.9% (+1.9% in December).

The final March reading of Michigan Sentiment is at 14:00 GMT which is expected to be confirmed at 97.8 (97.8 prelim, 93.8 in February). New Home Sales are at 14:00 GMT and are expected to improve to 625,000 in February (from 607,000 in January).

Chart of the Day – Silver

The prospect of a recovery in silver has been dealt a significant blow in the past few sessions. The market has been moving gradually higher over the past couple of weeks but with three consecutive decisive bear candles the recovery has been smashed. Taking the stairs up but the elevator back down? A massive bear candlestick from yesterday now puts the market in for a test of the key neckline breakout of $14.90. This means that silver is on the brink of a significant deterioration in outlook. The concern for the bulls is that there are now a series of bearish signals on momentum indicators, with the RSI failing at 50, MACD lines crossing lower below neutral and another bear cross sell signal on Stochastics. All of these indicators also have downside potential. The March low at $14.96 held the initial test of support yesterday and again this morning, but how the market responds into today’s close will be key. There is a pivot band around $15.10/$15.15 which is a basis of resistance now for an intraday recovery today. Unless the bulls reclaim this pivot, then the $14.90 support will remain under pressure. A close below $14.90 opens $14.45.