Dollar Rebound Still Indecisive, Can Fed Speakers Make The Difference?

 | Feb 23, 2018 08:07

Market Overview

As we move towards the end of the week, markets are beginning to look more settled. The spike higher on US Treasury yields in the wake of the FOMC minutes has calmed down with the US 10 year yield around 2.92%. The volatility in the equity markets which drove such a fearful reaction in recent weeks is also settling down and we are now seeing more of a truncated outlook where trends are being replaced by a broader phase of choppy consolidation. The run of near term recovery on the US dollar began to unwind yesterday but looks again to be regaining some ground this morning. However none of the moves are decisive.

FOMC member James Bullard of the St Louis Fed (non-voting and generally more dovish) has looked to rein in expectations of a potential 100 basis points tightening by the Fed in 2018 and this is helping to form a consolidation to an extent today. With a lack of major economic data the views of three more FOMC members could be a kay factor today that makes the difference. Dudley, Mester and Williams are all voters in 2018 and border the more hawkish scale of the committee. They could subsequently shape trading into the weekend if they ague strongly for a more aggressive series of tightening from the Fed.

Wall Street closed higher on the session but lost some steam into the close with the S&P 500 +0.1% at 2704. Asian markets were more positive with decent gains on the Nikkei which was +0.7%. European markets are accounting for the lost impetus on Wall Street and are trading mildly lower in early moves.

In forex, the dollar has regained a little ground again this morning across the majors, but can it continue the move?

In commodities, gold is $5 lower on the dollar rebound, whilst oil is only trading a touch weaker after a strong more on the back of a surprise drawdown on the EIA crude oil inventories.

Inflation is again in focus for traders today, with the final reading of Eurozone January CPI first up at 10:00 GMT which is expected to suggest that the flash readings were accurate with +1.3 for the headline CPI and +1.0% for core CPI. This would confirm the slip from +1.4% headline and +1.1% core CPI from last month.

Canadian CPI is at 13:30 GMT with headline CPI expected to drop to +1.4% (from +1.9%), whilst the core CPI movement from last month’s +1.2% for the year will also garner interest.

There are three FOMC voters all expected to speak today, with Bill Dudley (centrist) at 15:15 GMT, Loretta Mester (very hawkish) at 18:30 GMT and John Williams (centrist/mild hawk) at 20:40 GMT.

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Chart of the Day – AUD/JPY

The renewed selling pressure as the market fear increased three weeks ago meant that the recovery of Aussie/Yen went into sharp reverse again. This move has shown little sign of improving recently as the move has broken the support of the key November lows around 84.40. A downtrend channel formation has subsequently formed this week with Wednesday’s bearish engulfing candle and further subsequent downside on Thursday. Yesterday’s bearish candle was a decisive move to close clear of the support around 84.00 and coming with negative momentum configuration, further weakness to test the low at 83.30 can be expected. On a medium term basis is it the consistent close below the 84.40 which opens the downside now, with the April to June lows of 81.50/81.80 now back in the frame. Momentum configuration remains negative and suggests using strength as a chance to sell still, with anything around 84.40 being an ideal opportunity.