Dollar Remains Strong As Risk Appetite Recovers

 | Jun 20, 2018 08:39

Market Overview

When there is a sharp shift in sentiment on major geopolitical newsflow, markets can act quickly, however equally this knee-jerk reaction also tends to last only briefly before markets settle down again. The reaction to the US significantly ramping up the trade dispute with China hit risk appetite hard and saw a significant move towards a safe haven assets. However, already we see markets settling down again and moves being retraced. Subsequently we see bond yields having picked up, the Japanese yen unwinding its gains and Wall Street equities closing well off the day lows. Having hit 2.85% yesterday, the US 10 year yield is back above 2.90% again whilst the US dollar remains strong as yield differentials continue to move in its favour. So risk appetite is recovering, however all the while the US yield curve continues to bull flatten, something that is not conducive to sustained medium to longer term dollar strength. Despite this though, for now the greenback is performing well, with the US Dollar Index pressuring the 95.15 October/November highs.

As markets settle down, will the dollar which has been trading as a safe haven recently, continue to strengthen? EUR/USD breaking below $1.1500 would be a key gauge near term. The focus will be on Sintra today with many of the major central banks’ governors all speaking. Volatility across the forex majors could be elevated.

Wall Street closed well off its lows with the S&P 500 -0.4% lower (having been as much as -1.1% at one stage) whilst US equities futures are rising by +0.2% early today too. The Asian markets have also bounced back strongly with the Nikkei +1.2% whilst European markets are also set to be positive in early moves.

In forex there has been further strength for the US dollar, whilst the riskier currencies (Aussie and Kiwi) looking to rebound.

Positive risk appetite and a stronger dollar does not bode well for gold which is again struggling, whilst a bigger than expected drawdown on the API inventories and better risk has helped to support oil.

The big focus today for traders will come in the central bankers forum at Sintra, where from 14:30 BST a clutch of governors are expected to speak, including Jerome Powell (the Fed), Mario Draghi (ECB), Haruhiko Kuroda (BoJ) and Philip Lowe (RBA). This will cause potential volatility for the dollar, euro, yen and Australian dollar.

It is another light day for the economic calendar today which does not really get going until the US Q1 Current Account balance at 13:30 BST. Consensus forecasts expects the current account deficit to widen to -$129.0bn (from -$128.2bn in Q4 2018) which would be the widest level since Q2 2012. The US Existing Home Sales are at 15:00 BST which are expected to increase to 5.52m (from 5.46m last month).

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The EIA oil inventories are at 15:30 BST and are expected to show the crude stocks again in drawdown by -2.7m (from a drawdown of -4.1m barrels last week), whilst distillates are expected to drawdown by -0.6m barrels (from -2.1m draw last week) and also the gasoline stocks are meant to be drawing down by -1.0m barrels (-2.3m last week).

New Zealand Q1 GDP is announced at 2345BST and is expected to be +0.5% (+0.6% previous).

Chart of the Day – AUD/JPY

For months the range on Aussie/Yen has pulled higher and lower around the pivot at 82.60. This range of 400 pips between 80.50/84.50 has been very well-defined and conformed to some excellent ranging indicators. So with the Aussie under huge pressure yesterday and the safe haven yen finding significant gains, the pair pulled sharply lower yesterday to test the key support of the range low at 80.50. Is this the time to break the range? The technical indicators currently suggest that this is a test of the support and is not the precursor to a significant downside break. The RSI is into an area in the low 30s where rallies tend to take hold during this range, whilst there is no lead signal from either the MACD or Stochastics lines. The market closed outside the Bollinger Bands yesterday but the bands are broadly ranging still and this points towards a limited immediate downside potential. A decisive close below 80.50 would certainly increase the pressure, but the follow up candle to yesterday’s sharp session is crucial today. A close well off the low yesterday and an early rebound today raises expectations of playing the range. Building on initial support at 81.00 will help further.