Dollar Slip Continues As Treasury Yields Fall

 | Dec 04, 2018 10:02

Market Overview

Since the G20 there has been a shift in sentiment on the dollar. There is a degree of uncertainty over exactly what has been agreed between the US and China, but the mood for conciliation has seemingly improved. Although it may take a while still, the groundwork is there for a move towards an agreement. This is helping to restrict a key driver of continued dollar outperformance and the market will now begin to look towards Fed monetary policy, which has also taken a dovish tilt in recent days.

It is interesting to see therefore that the 10-Year US Treasury yield has fallen away below 3% again, but with the shorter dated yields holding up, talk will increase above curve inversion again. The 2s/10s spread is just 14 basis points today.

This is all putting the dollar under increasing pressure and is showing through gold pushing through $1236 which is a long term pivot, EUR/USD pulling higher towards $1.1400 and Dollar/Yen also lower.

Key focus will also remain on the continued underperformance of sterling in which Prime Minister Theresa May seems to have to jump from frying pan to frying pan via every fire in the kitchen. The UK Parliament begins a week long debate on her Withdrawal Agreement today, but now she also has to face off a contempt of Parliament challenge over the legal advice that the government have received.

Wall Street closed strongly higher again last night with the S&P 500 +1.1% at 2790, whilst the futures look to be giving back much of this today -0.6%. This has left Asian markets mixed today with the Nikkei -2.4% and Shanghai Composite +0.4%. European markets are slipping back too, with the FTSE 100 futures -0.3% in early moves.

In forex, the main theme is dollar weakness across the majors with yen strength but interestingly also the Aussie and Kiwi still strong.

In commodities the dollar weakness is a boost for gold which is testing above $1236 key resistance whilst oil continues to climb in its recovery by another percent.

This the day quiet day of the week for the economic calendar, with the UK Construction PMI at 09:30 GMT being the only real key release. Consensus is expecting a slip back to 52.5 in November (from 53.2 in October). Beyond that there will also be focus on Bank of England Governor Carney who is testifying to committee over the Bank’s Brexit scenarios. There are other speakers today with the FOMC’s John Williams (NYSE:WMB) (permanent voter, leans hawkish) at 15:00 GMT and the Bank of England’s Gertjan Vlieghe (centrist) at 1800GMT.

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Chart of the Day – USD/CAD

After eight weeks of trending higher, two fundamental factors (the dollar corrective move from the Trump/Xi meeting and the oil rebound on positive Russia/Saudi co-operation) have combined to drag the pair lower. A decisive bear candle yesterday has now broken the uptrend. The key will now be how the market responds to this trend break, and initial moves this morning suggest that the market is accepting the correction. There is an old pivot band around 1.3170 and support of a higher reaction low at 1.3125. If this support at 1.3125 were to be broken (confirmation on a closing basis) then this would signal a key shift in trend. The momentum indicators are already beginning to deteriorate with a negative divergence on the Stochastics and the RSI having fallen below 50 to a new seven week low. It was interesting to see that a downside gap was bearishly filled this morning at 1.3270 and if the resistance of another old pivot at 1.3225 cannot be quickly broken back above, the outlook will deteriorate further. This would mean that rallies would then be seen as a chance to sell.