Post Jackson Hole, Debt Ceiling Fears Push Up Euro

 | Aug 28, 2017 05:11

h2 Summary
  • Yellen and Draghi disappointed markets on Friday.
  • The euro broke above technical resistance.
  • Debt ceiling/unrest in D.C. is pushing up the euro to dangerous levels.

We are in a very weird time. Never has a new U.S. administration had to fight as much as Trump has had to in his first eight months in office. This fight, clearly being waged within Washington D.C. and not in the rest of the country, is creating turmoil that I feel will precipitate the next financial crisis.

The political narrative for the past six months has been the European Union surviving populist electoral challenges while the U.S. establishment fights back against a populist president. This is no different from the response in Europe in the wake of both Syriza’s victory in Greece and its response over the past fourteen months to Brexit.

It is clear the political establishment in both the EU and the U.S. have little regard for the wishes of their electorates. In Europe, the structure of the EU allows for this as policymakers are, for the most part, unelected.

In the U.S., on the other hand, we have degenerated into a kind of permanent political positioning for each election cycle. Campaigns never end; they just evolve tactically.

The convocation of central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyo., this year produced nothing of note from the world’s two most powerful central bank heads. Neither ECB President Mario Draghi nor FOMC Chair Janet Yellen had anything to say on Friday that should have rocked the markets.

And yet, looking at the USDX (PowerShares DB US Dollar Bullish (NYSE:UUP)) and the euro (Guggenheim CurrencyShares Euro (NYSE:FXE)) we saw fireworks from a technical perspective. The close this past week at $1.1925 is significant across all major time frames – weekly, monthly, quarterly.

This close busted through the July high of $1.1913, ensuring a high probability setup of a further rally into September. Moreover, it did so after a three-week consolidation centered on $1.175, so, this isn’t any kind of blow-off move. In fact, it looks like the beginning of the next big up-leg in this counter-trend rally in the euro.