US Dollar weakens while traders keep their powder dry for main event
- US Dollar sinks and sees session’s high against Euro, Pound Sterling and several other major currencies.
- Traders appear to be reshuffling their portfolio, allocating cash out of safe havens into risk assets.
- US Dollar Index barely holds the 103 level and could sink to 102.50 on the back of Powell’s speech.
The US Dollar (USD) is losing further ground against most of its peers, with Pound Sterling (GBP/USD) the most notable one at a one-month-high near 1.2650 and flirting with the high of Tuesday (1.0825) against Euro at 1.0810. A clear shift in sentiment is noticed as US bonds and the Greenback – both acting as safe havens – are losing interest as investors turn to equities. Traders seem to be using the window of opportunity that is coming with this possible Fed rate pause to jump on the equity rally with new highs for the Japan Nikkei Index and the industrial German DAX.
Few data points are set to come out before the US Fed rate decision and subsequent press conference from Fed Chairman Jerome Powell.. Headline and core Producer Price Index (PPI) data is due at 12:30 GMT, and the EIA Crude Oil Inventory numbers will come at 14:30 GMT. The countdown will then start towards the Fed rate decision, with the official release at 18:00 GMT and the FOMC Press Conference by Fed Chairman Powell at 18:30 GMT.
Daily digest: US Dollar to possibly ease further throughout the day
- A first small blip of economic data for this Wednesday cames in the form of the MBA Mortgage Applications which came out at 7.2% against -1.4% previous last week. This ends a four-week losing streak.
- Traders can further consolidate the possible rate pause of the Fed later Wednesday with the US Producer Price Index (PPI) coming out beforehand at 12:30 GMT. The monthly overall PPI is expected to contract by 0.1% in May after increasing 0.2% in April. The monthly core PPI is forecasted to steady at 0.2%. On a yearly basis, headline PPI is set to drop from 2.3% to 1.5%, and the core to drop a touch from 3.2% to 2.9%.
- China’s Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) came out with comment on the US blacklisting some entities, calling it ‘classic economic coercion’. Urges to stop unreasonable pressure for Chinese firms.
- Former US President Donald Trump has been indicted in a federal court for holding back official White House documents. He pleaded not guilty on all charges.
- Equities are not losing steam on their winning streak. Another 33-year high for the Nikkei, while China tech is the biggest winner intraday. European indices are back in the green with the German DAX printing a new historic high and US equity futures are all trading at the highs.
- The US Treasury had to pay a higher yield for sellings its 1-year and 30-year bonds on Tuesday. The auctions for the 30-year bond came in at 3.908%, higher than the market pricing of 3.741%. The 1-year bond yield got placed at 4.93% while 4.64% was trading in the market at that time. This shows less appetite for safe haven bonds from investors, confirming the rotation into riskier assets.
- The CME Group FedWatch Tool shows that markets are pricing in a 5% chance of Fed rate hike today, a 71% chance for a hike in July and a 76% chance of a hike for September. Markets have abandoned the idea that there will be interest-rate cuts this year.
- The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield trades at 3.79%. This marks a substantial move higher on the back of Tuesday US inflation numbers, after which investors sold their bond holdings to allocate more money into risk assets. Falling bond prices are inversely correlated to the bond yield. The lower the price, the higher yield that needs to be offered.
US Dollar Index technical analysis: Selling pressure persists
The US Dollar is showing further signs of weakening as most currencies in the Dollar Index (DXY) are gaining traction against the Greenback. The 103.00 floor barely got tested on Tuesday and looks to receive another test later today.
On the upside, 105.44 (200-day Simple Moving Average) still acts as a long-term price target to hit.,The next upside key level for the US Dollar Index is at 105.00 (psychological, static level), which acts as an intermediary element to cross the open space.
On the downside, 103.04 (100-day SMA) aligns as the first support level to confirm a change of trend. In case that breaks down, watch how the DXY reacts close to the 55-day SMA at 102.56 in order to assess any further downturn or upturn.
How is US Dollar correlated with US stock markets?
Stock markets in the US are likely to turn bearish if the Federal Reserve goes into a tightening cycle to battle rising inflation. Higher interest rates will ramp up the cost of borrowing and weigh on business investment. In that scenario, investors are likely to refrain from taking on high-risk, high-return positions. As a result of risk aversion and tight monetary policy, the US Dollar Index (DXY) should rise while the broad S&P 500 Index declines, revealing an inverse correlation.
During times of monetary loosening via lower interest rates and quantitative easing to ramp up economic activity, investors are likely to bet on assets that are expected to deliver higher returns, such as shares of technology companies. The Nasdaq Composite is a technology-heavy index and it is expected to outperform other major equity indexes in such a period. On the other hand, the US Dollar Index should turn bearish due to the rising money supply and the weakening safe-haven demand.