Safe Havens Supported Due To Dollar Pressure

 | Jul 25, 2017 08:41

Market Overview

As the Fed prepares for its two day meeting we see the dollar remaining under pressure. This comes despite Treasury yields having stabilised and beginning to tick higher again, with the dollar yet to appreciably respond. The politics surrounding Donald Trump Jr and Jared Kushner who are testifying this week on the Russian involvement in the US election remain a drag on the dollar.

Unless the Fed announces a start to its balance sheet rundown in tomorrow’s FOMC announcement, it will be difficult for the dollar to change course. A drastic Fed announcement in the absence of a Yellen press conference or economic projections remains an unlikely scenario, so selling the dollar into strength is likely to continue. Equity markets are in the midst of earnings season now, however European markets have been under pressure from the strength of their currencies. Once again, rallies still look to be a chance to sell. There is support though with the rebound in oil following suggestions that Nigeria may be willing to take part in production curbs.

Wall Street closed mixed to lower last night with the tech heavy Nasdaq 100 up again, whilst the Dow and S&P were weaker. The S&P 500 fell -0.1% to 2470. Asian markets were mixed to lower with the Nikkei -0.1% whilst European markets have bounced today with the FTSE 100 higher after strong losses yesterday.

In forex, the dollar is mildly weaker across the board, with the euro and the yen performing well again.

For commodities, this dollar weakness is helping to support gold higher by $2, whilst oil is 0.6% higher.

The main focus will be on the US Consumer Confidence but there is also some interesting German data. The German Ifo Business Climate at 09:00 BST is expected to dip very slightly to 114.9 back from last month’s record high of 115.1. There is a positive correlation with German growth, so the DAX, German Bunds and euro will be reactive.

The S&P Case Shiller House Price Index is at 14:00 BST which is expected to tick mildly higher to +5.8% (from last month’s +5.7%). The Richmond Manufacturing Index at 15:00 BST is expected to stay at 7 for a second month in a row, having beaten expectations last month in the rebound back to 7. However, the main event will be the US Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence which is at 15:00 BST and is expected to drop back to 116.5 after rolling over in recent months, down from 118.9 last month.

Chart of the Day – EUR/JPY

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The strong rally of early July has been broadly consolidating for the past couple of weeks since topping out at 130.75. It was interesting to see that whilst the euro strengthened with the ECB last week, the subsequent candles have been corrective. This comes as an uptrend channel of the past few weeks is now being breached. Momentum indicators have rolled over with the MACD lines now tracking lower and the RSI is back to 60 which was a four week low. The key support to watch near term is at 128.50 which has been tested on several occasions in the past week or so and so far held firm. However a breach would then mean that the market have formed a lower high at 130.50 and arguably form a small top pattern which would imply 200 pips lower. For now, the medium term outlook remains positive but a near term corrective move cannot be ruled out. The hourly chart shows a ranging market, which will give the bulls hope of hanging on. There is also a band of resistance 129.30/129.75 which if breached would re-open 130.50, however if today’s mild bounce consistently fails in this resistance then it would increase pressure back on 128.50.