Dollar Strong Post Fed Minutes, Yen Resumes Outperformance

 | Feb 22, 2018 08:47

Market Overview

The Fed minutes initially gave equity traders what they wanted. Limited fear of inflation and an improving economic outlook. However the reaction on the bond markets eventually drove more of a fearful response. The addition of one word to the outlook, 'further' with regards to policy tightening, pulled US Treasury yields higher and the reaction subsequently spooked equity markets.

The dollar has rallied as it was a positive economic position rather than inflation driving yields higher, but equity markets are concerned that three hikes in 2018 may actually become four. Fear is helping to pull traders back into the yen once more. My feeling is that this is a bit of a heavy-handed over-reaction which will be unwound. The market has needed to continue to price in the three hikes, but there is little need for the Fed to really spook the markets with accelerating tightening. However, fear is a significant enemy in these markets now.

Wall Street closed lower again with the S&P 500 -0.5% at 2701, whilst Asian markets were broadly lower (Nikkei -1.1%) and European markets are opening strongly down. Can the bulls react to prevent renewed selling fears from taking hold?

In forex, the dollar is strong across the majority of the majors, but the yen is the main outperformer today.

In commodities, the stronger dollar is hitting gold by a couple of dollars, whilst oil is a percent lower even though the API crude stocks showed a surprise drawdown.

For economic data today, the German Ifo Business Climate is at 09:00 GMT and is expected to slip to 117.1 (from 117.6 last month). Then the market is not forecasting any revisions to the second reading of UK Q4 2017 GDP growth at 09:30 GMT which is expected to remain at+0.5%. The ECB Monetary Policy Meeting Accounts at 12:30 GMT will also be eyed and could drive some volatility through the euro.

US Weekly Jobless Claims are at 13:30 GMT and are expected to remain around 230,000 where it was last week. The EIA Oil Inventories are a day delayed this week due to Presidents Day and are at 16:00 GMT with the crude oil stocks expected to again grow by 2.0m barrels (after +1.8m barrels last week), with distillates in drawdown by -1.5m barrels (-0.5m barrels last week) and gasoline inventories in drawdown by 0.7m (+3.5m last week).

The comments from the FOMC’s Bostic who is a voting member in 2018 will also be watched.

Chart of the Day – FTSE 100

At yesterday’s close, the recovery on FTSE 100 had been on the brink of a key technical breakout. The original spike rebound failed at 7312 before retreating back to form a low at 7073. Last week’s recovery could not quite break back above 7312 however after yesterday’s strong bull candle the market looked ideally placed for another challenge. However a sharp sell-off on Wall Street in the wake of the Fed minutes has changed the emphasis of the market this morning. How the bulls respond to the initial downside this morning will be key. Holding above 7202 is the first aim in a fast moving market, but then the bulls will look to close back above the 23.6% Fib retracement at 7244. This all comes with the momentum indicators all improving, with the RSI into the low 40s, the Stochastics rising and most importantly, the MACD lines posting a bullish crossover. Ultimately, a move above 7312 would complete a base pattern, but tht is for another day hopefully. Today is about damage limitation.

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