Dollar Turn Remains Elusive

The end of the US dollar’s downside
correction, which we see having begun in mid-December, following the Fed hike
rather than the start of the New Year, is proving more elusive than we anticipated. 
 Our reading of the technical condition and the weak
close before the weekend warns of the downside risks.


The verbal
intervention by the new US Administration and the unexpected weakness in wage growth may be factors extending the correction.
  Nevertheless, we continue to view
the dollar’s pullback as corrective in nature and not the end of the bull run, and still see the macroeconomic considerations falling into place for a resumption of the underlying bull market.  
Following the
US January jobs report, the odds of a rate hike in March fell.
According to Bloomberg’s calculations, the odds of a March hike fell to
24% from 32%.   Our own calculation was closer to the CME’s estimate of
almost 18% before the employment data and 9% afterward.
 Both Bloomberg and the CME estimate the probability of that the Fed funds
target is 75-100 bp by the end of June edged higher.  For Bloomberg, the
odds increased to 71% from 68% and for the CME 49.3% from 48.1%.   
The Dollar
Index has yet to sustain upticks.
  The recovery after new lows since
mid-November were recorded on February 2
was constructive, but the pre-weekend price action neutralized it.  There
is a band of mild support seen between 99.20 and 99.40.  We note that last
week, the Dollar Index met the 38.2% retracement of the gains since last year’s
lows set in May (~99.25).  Stronger support is seen near 98.95, and a break of it could signal a move toward
98.00. (~97.85 is the 50% retracement of the rally since last May).  On the upside,
a move through the pre-weekend high near 100.25 would be a favorable sign.
 
The euro flirted with the 100-day moving average (~1.0790) and the 50%
retracement of the losses since the US election (~$1.0820) and a 38.2%
retracement of the euro’s slide since last year’s high (~$1.1615).
Medium-investors seemed to see it as a reasonable selling opportunity.  The 61.8% retracement of the
post-election more is near $1.0935, and $1.0980 is the 50% retracement of the
larger move.  The Slow Stochastics have turned lower, but the MACDs have
yet to cross.  The RSI did not confirm the new high last week, but the RSI
is flat a little below 60.  
The two-year
interest rate differential widened in the US favor for six consecutive sessions and the second straight
week after a five-week period of narrowing.  
The close before the weekend of almost 194
bp is the largest US premium since January 4 and the highest weekly close of
the year so far.  If this is sustained,
the greenback should begin finding better traction.  The German two -year
yield may ease as a safe harbor ahead of
next month’s Dutch elections.  Political risk in France,(and to a less
extent in Italy, perhaps) may also favor Germany debt securities. 
The yen was the
strongest of the major currencies last week, gaining 2.2% against the
greenback.
 The yen’s gains ended a two-week drift lower, during which it lost
about 0.5%.  The US dollar successfully tested the JPY112 level twice, and
the bounces (~JPY114.00 and ~JPY113.50) appeared to lack conviction.  The
Slow Stochastics has been trending higher since January 19, but last week
leveled out and rolled over.  The MACDs have not yet turned, though a turn
still seems near.  
The US 10-year
premium over Japan narrowed a few basis points last week, which is the second
consecutive week of narrowing, and the fifth of the past six weeks.  
The premium peaked in mid-December when
the Fed hiked  (~251 bp).  It had fallen to about 230 bp on January
11 before widening to almost 245 bp two weeks later.  It eased back to 235
bp last week before firming ahead of the
weekend.  
With a push
from the Bank of England, sterling staged
a key reversal on February 2. 
 It made a new high for the move and
then was sold off and closed below the previous day’s low.  Sterling
traded heavily before the weekend.  It was the weakest of the majors.
 The nearly 0.6% fall followed a two-week 3.1% advance.  Important
technical support is seen in the
$1.2400-$1.2430 area.  The Slow Stochastics have turned lower, and the
MACDs look poised to cross.  The RSI turned lower but is neutral.  A
move above $1.2550 would likely turn the
technical tone more positive.  
The US dollar
recorded highs near CAD1.36 in November and again in December.
  Between
the two peaks, the US dollar fell to a CAD1.3080 valley.  After having fallen through it, the dollar recovered but only to sell off again, and
finished the week below it.  The US dollar finished the week below the 50%
retracement (~CAD1.3030) of its rally since last year’s low (~CAD1.2460).
 The 61.8% retracement is near CAD1.29.  The downside momentum eased
as the greenback traded within the January 31 range for the last three
sessions.  The break of that range–CAD1.2970 to CAD1.3125 will be
technically important.  
The Australian
dollar appreciated every session last week (now a six-day streak).
  The 1.7% advance on the week, the
fifth weekly advance in the past six weeks,
brought it to the $0.7700 area that provided to be a formidable nemesis last
year.  Occasional the level yielded, but not on a sustained basis and
closes above it were rarer still.  The upper Bollinger Band is found near
there now.  The MACDs looked like
they were poised to cross lower, like the Slow Stochastics.  Instead, the MACDs pushed higher, and the Slow Stochastics are turning
higher.  
The Australian
dollar appreciated 2.5% on a trade-weighted basis last month. 
 It is the fourth monthly rise in the past five
months.  It is now at levels not seen since the middle of 2015.  The
terms of trade have improved for Australia.  Australia reported a record
trade surplus for December last week, owing in no small measure to exports to
China and a sharp increase or iron ore and coal shipments.  The RBA meets
next week, and given the vulnerability of
the market, a few well-placed words by
Governor Lowe could help spur an adjustment of positions.    Without
it, the bulls may remain in control and press ahead.  The measuring
objective of the large rounded bottom may be near $0.7900.   On the other
hand, a move below $0.7580 may be the first sign that the $0.7700 ceiling is still in place.  
With few
exceptions, PMIs started the year upbeat. 
 It provided a reminder that with modest cuts in OPEC and non-OPEC, even with US
shale oil production offsetting some of the cuts theoretically, demand is
gradually catching up to output.  The March light sweet futures contract
gained 1.25% last week, the best gain so far here in 2017.   The technical
indicators are not generating strong signals,
and the contract looks set to continue to traverse a $52-$56 trading range.
 Presently it is in the middle of that range.  Prices peaked a few
days before the Fed hiked rates in December and when US interest rates peaked.
The US 10-year
yield slipped two basis points last week to finish at 2.46%. 
 Over the previous two weeks, the yield had increased
eight basis points.  The yield was confined to the previous week’s range
when it recovered from the test on the 2.30% level.  The technical
indicators for the March futures contract are giving contradictory signals; The Slow Stochastic is turning up
while the MACDs are poised to turn lower.  The RSI is flat near 48.5.
 The sideways drift can whipsaw the indicators.  Prices are more important.  It is only
important if there is a break of a 123-18 to 125-12 range.   The rest
seems like noise.  
The S&P 500
gapped higher on February 3, and in so doing, negated the bearish three-day
island top created by last Monday’s (January 30) sharply lower opening. 
 With the strong pre-weekend close near session highs,
it is within spitting distance of the record high (~2601). The S&P 500 is
may be a good example of prices leading the technical indicators.  After
trading sideways for a few sessions, the strong rally before the weekend was not sufficient to turn the Slow Stochastics or
MACDs (the RSI leaped higher).  The NASDAQ three-day island top was also negated by the end of last week.
 It gapped higher on Wednesday and failed in attempting to close the gap
on Thursday. The close was on the highs, less than 0.1% from its record high. 

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