• Dollar Briefly Hits a Month High before Risk-Led Correction
  • Euro Recovers Lost Ground on Greece News but is this a True Reversal?
  • British Pound Hits a Three Month Against Dollar as Sales Slow, Rates Drop
  • Canadian Dollar Tumbles as Yield Outlook and Oil Toppled
  • Japanese Yen Posts Uneven Performance Despite Supposed Risk Decline
  • Crude Oil Falls back to Three-Year Rising Trendline as IEA Open Reserves
  • Gold Slides Below 50-Day Average For the First Time Since February

Dollar Briefly Hits a Month High before Risk-Led Correction

Thursday’s trading session was a dramatic one for the currency and capital markets. For the benchmark dollar (ticker = USDollar), the biggest intraday rally since its climb on the 15th (as rumors of a possible Greek coalition led many to believe an EU default was near) offered a clear reflection of the fundamentals that have defined this particular asset as a reserve currency. That said, the same safe haven role would ensure the mid-session correction that began with temporary relief for Greece’s debt crisis and subsequently evolved into a rally for equities and risk appetite. Through the end of the trading day, the Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index would retrace nearly two-thirds of the morning rally; but the bullish bearing was still in place. The same retention of strength was noted across the fundamental and risk spectrum with pairs like EURUSD, USDJPY and AUDUSD closing out with greenback gains. That said, the near-full reversal of a 1.9 percent decline on the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average reminds us that markets are still looking for a solid trend to follow and the dollar will struggle until that theme is found.

Tracking the dollar’s progress through the previous session, it isn’t a stretch to connect its performance to the fallout from the Fed decision and Chairman Bernanke’s commentary Wednesday afternoon. The climb began not long after the market participants and the media realized the central bank head would not commit to a replacement to the expiring (next week) QE2 program. The immediate implications for the greenback will be a turn in market-based rates when the pumping of funds into the system ends and demand continues to rise. Through the subsequent trading sessions, the focus shifted to the ‘risk’ aspects of this change of gears. An abundant and cheap source of capital would soon be removed, and the increase in cost would unsettle the balance of growing risk and already feeble yield income. Undermined risk appetite would carry over into the Thursday’s session as Chinese money market rates surged to a 2007 high and default premiums for Europe surged to record highs. Yet, with the dollar tapped into sentiment, the sharp rebound in global equities that followed news of Greece’s temporary austerity gap plug (more on that below) would spark the same about-face for the greenback.

Heading into the final trading hours of the week, volatility is still high as the market is very sensitive to meaningful fundamental developments. Therefore, our primary concern still lies with broad changes in sentiment. Active themes and trends should remain our focus; and that means we are still waiting for underlying themes to establish lasting, cross-market runs. Nevertheless, we should still keep more distant concerns in mind. Next week, QE2 ends and speculation on US rates will pick up. Another concern is yet another breakdown in deficit ceiling talks in Congress.

Euro Recovers Lost Ground on Greece News but is this a True Reversal?

Sometimes, the market is only concerned with short-term relief. Through there may be larger problems on the horizon, speculators are willing to put their faith in short-term fixes that support their trades. That is the case the euro was presented with this past session. As the risk aversion move was mixing with the growing EU contagion storyline; temporary reprieve was offered with news that Greece’s new Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos had come up with a way to close the 2.8 billion austerity gap with a one-time solidarity level amongst other initiatives. This will push back a default; but it far from solves the underlying issue. After approving the medium-term budget, EU officials must still agree on a bailout to secure the IMF’s next round of aid in the first program. Furthermore, if that additional support comes through, the country will still struggle severely to service its debt while other troubled members (Portugal and Ireland) will ask for additional accommodation.

British Pound Hits a Three Month Against Dollar as Sales Slow, Rates Drop

Data for the British pound this past session offered up a mixed picture. The CBI retail sales report for June reported the first net decline from the indicator in a year while mortgage approvals offered a modest uptick (to 30,509) without meaningfully altering the troubled housing sector’s course. Yet, calendar watching is the true fundamental guide. Looking at overnight UK Libor rates, we can see where the bear trend originates.

Canadian Dollar Tumbles as Yield Outlook and Oil Toppled

Just as the interest rate outlook for the Euro Zone and UK is having an impact on their respective currencies; the short-term Canadian Libor rate is starting to destabilize the usually steadfast loonie. The one-week rate has seen its fastest retreat since December as growth, capital markets and interest rate forecasts recede. Adding to that pain is the strong greenback and the four-month low in US oil.

Japanese Yen Posts Uneven Performance Despite Supposed Risk Decline

If everything in the market were simple, Thursday would have ended with a strong rally across the board for the Japanese yen. However, that was not the case. The US dollar, Japanese yen and New Zealand dollar all posted gains against the yen; while the rest of the majors held to relatively small losses. Risk aversion was in control Thursday; but the brand of ‘safe haven’ is becoming more important.

Crude Oil Falls back to Three-Year Rising Trendline as IEA Open Reserves

US crude oil (West Texas Intermediate) has held to a general downtrend since the beginning of May. However, that bearing has recently found a greater level of momentum just over these past few weeks. Risk aversion has hit the speculative ranks in this commodity; but it was the news that the IEA planned to release 60 million barrels of oil to compensate for Libya’s shortfall that has now put prices with its three-year bull trend.

Gold Slides Below 50-Day Average For the First Time Since February

We have seen a few pullback s in gold over the past months; but we seem to be reaching milestones more frequently recently. With Thursday’s session, the metal fell below its 50-day moving average for the first time since mid-February and it closed below the trendline that has defined the bull run since the end of January. Risk aversion typically helps gold; but if the need is for liquidity, the dollar attracts more of that capital.

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ECONOMIC DATA

Next 24 Hours

GMT

Currency

Release

Survey

Previous

Comments

1:35

CNY

MNI Business Condition Survey (JUN)

61.22

Outlook slightly weakened by PBoC policy

6:45

EUR

French Consumer Confidence Indicator (JUN)

84

84

German outlook most important – peripheral risk and slower rate of exports seen as most damaging to sentiment

8:00

EUR

German IFO – Expectations (JUN)

106.3

107.4

8:00

EUR

German IFO – Business Climate (JUN)

113.4

114.2

8:00

EUR

German IFO – Current Assessment (JUN)

120.8

121.4

8:00

EUR

Italian Retail Sales (YoY) (APR)

-0.7%

-2.0%

Short term sales expected to fall slower, as year-over-year shows economic recovery

8:00

EUR

Italian Retail Sales s.a. (MoM) (APR)

-0.1%

-0.2%

12:30

USD

Cap Goods Orders Nondef Ex Air (MAY)

1.0%

-2.6%

Major data event for the day – expectations for stronger manufacturing, orders should help economic confidence

12:30

USD

Cap Goods Ship Nondef Ex Air (MAY)

-1.7%

12:30

USD

Durable Goods Orders (MAY)

1.5%

-3.6%

12:30

USD

Durables Ex Transportation (MAY)

0.9%

-1.6%

12:30

USD

Gross Domestic Product (Annualized) (1Q F)

1.9%

1.8%

Final revision of first quarter output not expected to drastically change

12:30

USD

Gross Domestic Product Price Index (1Q F)

1.9%

1.9%

12:30

USD

Core Personal Consumption Exp (QoQ) (1Q F)

1.4%

1.4%

12:30

USD

Personal Consumption (1Q F)

2.2%

2.2%

GMT

Currency

Upcoming Events & Speeches

8:00

EUR

EU Leaders Summit in Brussels

SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE LEVELS

CLASSIC SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE – 18:00 GMT

Currency

EUR/USD

GBP/USD

USD/JPY

USD/CHF

USD/CAD

AUD/USD

NZD/USD

EUR/JPY

GBP/JPY

Resist 2

1.5160

1.6750

89.00

0.9345

1.0275

1.1800

0.8400

122.00

146.05

Resist 1

1.5000

1.6600

86.00

0.8900

1.0000

1.1000

0.8215

118.00

140.00

Spot

1.4242

1.5996

80.57

0.8381

0.9788

1.0518

0.8135

114.76

128.89

Support 1

1.4000

1.6050

80.00

0.8300

0.9500

1.0400

0.7745

113.80

125.00

Support 2

1.3700

1.5750

75.00

0.8250

0.9055

1.0200

0.6850

105.50

119.00

CLASSIC SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE EMERGING MARKETS 18:00 GMTSCANDIES CURRENCIES 18:00 GMT

Currency

USD/MXN

USD/TRY

USD/ZAR

USD/HKD

USD/SGD

Currency

USD/SEK

USD/DKK

USD/NOK

Resist 2

13.8500

1.6575

7.4025

7.8165

1.3650

Resist 2

7.5800

5.6625

6.1150

Resist 1

12.5000

1.6300

7.3500

7.8075

1.3250

Resist 1

6.5175

5.3100

5.7075

Spot

11.8682

1.6301

6.8360

7.7901

1.2369

Spot

6.4563

5.2370

5.4648

Support 1

11.5200

1.5040

6.5575

7.7490

1.2145

Support 1

6.0800

5.1050

5.3040

Support 2

11.4400

1.4725

6.4295

7.7450

1.2000

Support 2

5.8085

4.9115

4.9410

INTRA-DAY PIVOT POINTS 18:00 GMT

Currency

EUR/USD

GBP/USD

USD/JPY

USD/CHF

USD/CAD

AUD/USD

NZD/USD

EUR/JPY

GBP/JPY

Resist 2

1.4473

1.6139

81.06

0.8469

0.9887

1.0640

0.8227

116.25

129.77

Resist 1

1.4358

1.6068

80.82

0.8425

0.9837

1.0579

0.8181

115.50

129.33

Pivot

1.4242

1.6003

80.55

0.8395

0.9776

1.0517

0.8132

114.68

128.91

Support 1

1.4127

1.5932

80.31

0.8351

0.9726

1.0456

0.8086

113.93

128.46

Support 2

1.4011

1.5867

80.04

0.8321

0.9665

1.0394

0.8037

113.11

128.04

INTRA-DAY PROBABILITY BANDS 18:00 GMT

Currency

EUR/USD

GBP/USD

USD/JPY

USD/CHF

USD/CAD

AUD/USD

NZD/USD

EUR/JPY

GBP/JPY

Resist. 3

1.4440

1.6166

81.40

0.8488

0.9885

1.0663

0.8251

116.44

130.49

Resist. 2

1.4391

1.6124

81.20

0.8461

0.9861

1.0627

0.8222

116.02

130.09

Resist. 1

1.4341

1.6081

80.99

0.8434

0.9836

1.0591

0.8193

115.60

129.69

Spot

1.4242

1.5996

80.57

0.8381

0.9788

1.0518

0.8135

114.76

128.89

Support 1

1.4143

1.5911

80.15

0.8328

0.9740

1.0445

0.8077

113.92

128.08

Support 2

1.4093

1.5868

79.94

0.8301

0.9715

1.0409

0.8048

113.50

127.68

Support 3

1.4044

1.5826

79.74

0.8274

0.9691

1.0373

0.8019

113.08

127.28

v

Written by: John Kicklighter, Senior Currency Strategist for DailyFX.com

To receive John’s reports via email or to submit Questions or Comments about an article; email jkicklighter@dailyfx.com

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