Dollar Holds Up As Geopolitical Concerns Fail To Impact

 | Sep 15, 2017 09:54

Market Overview

With the dollar holding up, are markets starting to take a less fearful view of the geopolitical concerns about North Korea’s missile testing? Yet another ballistic missile was flown over Japan last night. The initial reaction was a move into safe haven assets, with gold, the yen and US Treasuries being bought. However, the move was brief before unwinding back again. It was interesting to see that Asian equities failed to react too negatively, with European markets only mildly lower in early moves today. The moves on the dollar today will be a key gauge, as the greenback has been hit on previous occasions. If the dollar can find support today, then the market will likely hold up in front of the FOMC meeting next week. With US CPI coming in higher than expected yesterday this helped Treasury yields and the dollar higher. Focus will also be on US Retail Sales today.

Wall Street closed in further all-time high territory last night with the Dow finally also taking part although the S&P 500 was slightly weaker at -0.1% at 2495. Asian markets were mixed in the wake of the latest North Korean missile launch, with the Nikkei +0.5%. European markets are a touch more cautious though today.

In forex, the dollar has already recouped losses and is trading higher against the yen, whilst it is interesting to see sterling continuing to outperform in the wake of the Bank of England.

Gold and silver are consolidating, whilst oil has drifted slightly lower following the dip into the close last night.

Although the European session may be relatively quiet for economic announcements, it is far more busy as the US comes on line. Starting off with the US Retail Sales at 13:30 BST which are expected to show ex-autos growth of +0.5% for the month after last month’s +0.5% gain. This would pull the year on year data back close towards the levels of earlier in the year close to 5%. The New York Fed Manufacturing index is also at 13:30 BST and although is expected to decline from last month’s strong 25.2, a forecast reading of +19.0 would still be a strong reading. The US Industrial Production is at 14:15 BST with an expectation of +0.1% for the month. This would continue a run of six consecutive months of monthly growth and the year on year data back up around 2% for more than two year highs. The Capacity Utilization is expected to improve further to 76.8% which would be the highest since early 2016.

Chart of the Day – FTSE 100

FTSE 100 underperformed badly yesterday as sterling shot higher in the wake of the Bank of England (the negative correlation trade was working very well again). However despite Wall Street breaking new all-time highs, the decline has dragged FTSE 100 back to a key level of support once more. Since the late June sell off, the support at 7300 has be repeatedly tested, only to hold up on each occasion. Aside from three intraday breaches of around 10 ticks in August, the support has held firm. Once more yesterday this support was tested but this time closed below 7300 for the lowest close since early May. The momentum indicators have ticked lower as the market has now closed lower for three consecutive sessions, and there is a negative bias. However there is little real sign that there is going to be a decisive breakdown, with previous tests of the support having seen the RSI bottom in the 35/40 region. The hourly chart shows a very consistent range trade over the past month. Support in the band 7289/7300 and resistance between 7440/7460 have been consistent. The hourly RSI reflects the range play with oscillating momentum. The early drop today will be interesting as another closing breach of 7300 would suggest the market is accepting the breakdown. This would then complete a range breakdown and imply 140 ticks of downside, with the next support at 7200. Initial resistance 7322/7336 today.

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