Dollar Breaks to 3 Year High Before Holiday, Taper Market Shakeup
Euro Drops Below 1.3000 as Portugal Adds to Growing Crisis Concerns
Japanese Yen Crosses Advance for the Fourth Day, Capital Flows On Deck
Australia Dollar Volatility Stirred but Trend Still Illusive after Data Run
British Pound Advances Despite Business Group’s Call for Stimulus
US Oil Soars for a Third Day to 14 Month High
Gold Recovery Stalled by Dollar’s Strong Rebound

Dollar Breaks to 3 Year High Before Holiday, Taper Market Shakeup
The Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (ticker = USDollar) rallied above 10,875 this past session to break through to fresh three-year highs. This move is partly attributable to risk trends concerns – the S&P 500 has notably failed multiple times to make progress beyond 1,625 – and also has its contributions from Taper speculation. Yet we shouldn’t let the technical breakout for EURUSD below 1.3000 and USDJPY above 100 lead us to complacency. Trades are made on the follow through, not the breakout. And, the momentum behind a bullish dollar theme is highly circumspect moving forward. Immediately ahead of us, we have a round of notable event risk – ISM service sector activity, ADP employment change and US trade. All notable for a growth update, the former two are also key NFP proxies. The national employment report due Friday presents the first update on a key Fed Taper target (the jobless rate) since the group noted their intention to taper later this year. There will be healthy doses of fear and speculation before the data hits Friday…and before that, we have a liquidity drain for the national holiday.

Euro Drops Below 1.3000 as Portugal Adds to Growing Crisis Concerns
The euro was a mixed bag this past session, but the standout move was the EURUSD’s 0.7 percent slide below the support on recent congestion. A strong dollar was certainly a critical aspect of this move, but the euro itself would contribute to the bearish development. For traditional data, the docket was light. The Eurozone factory-level inflation figures did little to alter the assessment of health in the regional economy. Far more important was the spread of the euro crisis fire. While German Chancellor made troubling remarks to suggest Greece may not receive its full €8.1 billion aid tranche by August and that no additional debt cuts would come, the bigger headline was from Portugal. In the wake of the Finance Minister’s resignation just a few days ago, the Foreign Minister announced his exit Tuesday. As cabinet members leave, the coalition government is at very real risk of dissolution. And, a vote will likely find a more desperate nation to vote against austerity.

Japanese Yen Crosses Advance for the Fourth Day, Capital Flows On Deck
Over the past two weeks, the yen crosses have climbed between 2.0 (AUDJPY) and 6.7 percent (USDJPY). This clearly speaks to yen weakness rather than coincidental strength from its many counterparts. The correlation between the yen crosses and Nikkei 225 suggests there is an element of ‘risk appetite’ building up the carry position – but it is the return of stability for the local markets that is the more likely explanation for this performance. With the Bank of Japan a constant pressure against the yen, when all else is stable; the crosses will rise. Yet, a quiet backdrop will be difficult to maintain beyond the next 24 hours. With the thin liquidity conditions for Thursday’s session and the global sentiment sparks in Friday’s NFP release, fear and then sentiment winds will overwhelm the slow climb.

Australia Dollar Volatility Stirred but Trend Still Illusive after Data RunThe past 24 hours has proven a volatile period for the Australian dollar. With the RBA rate decision carrying the market Tuesday and a round of economic data this morning, there is a considerable amount of volatility. The rate decision – where the central bank held its benchmark rate at 2.75 percent – was most notable for the group’s decision to maintain its ‘scope for further easing’ language and to notably upgrade its assessment of the Australian dollar’s ‘excessive value’. The bank’s statement noted that even after a 10 percent drop, the Aussie dollar was still expensive and likely to fall further. The data this morning seemed to support a curb speculation of further rate cuts with a trade surplus at a 17-month high and retail sales rising, but RBA Governor Stevens would make it a point to reiterate his dovish/bearish outlook.

British Pound Advances Despite Business Group’s Call for Stimulus
With the exception of GBPUSD, the sterling put in for a bullish performance this past session. In testimony to Parliament, Bank of England member Tucker offered a dour assessment of economic conditions. Aside from his assessment of a bumpy recovery going forward, the policy maker warned that a help-to-buy program (form of stimulus) was unwise and that recent market volatility was a warning sign. Both a warning and a plea, business group BCC (British Chamber of Commerce) called on the incoming BoE Governor to boost credit through an increase in bond purchases and expansion of the Funds for Lending Scheme. As a balance of market interest, the Treasury auctioned off £3.5 billion in 10-year notes for a higher 2.584 percent yield (previous was 2.365 percent) but better demand (1.76 bid-to-cover versus 1.52 previously). In the upcoming session – the day before the rate decision – we have a BoE credit conditions report and service PMI survey due.

US Oil Soars for a Third Day to 14 Month High
US oil – West Texas Intermediate – has soared an incredible 5.6 percent so far this week. With Tuesday’s 1.6 percent jump, the market pushed to a nine-month high. In exceptionally-volatile trade early Wednesday, crude moved to overtake $100 per barrel and test highs not seen since May 2012. The magnitude of the move to multi-month month highs in itself is remarkable, but the heavy overnight activity speaks to exceptional market conditions. Volume on the futures markets showed the market traded around 1 million contracts through the past session – the heaviest trading since February 7, 2012. This isn’t a simple stop-clearing speculative move. Supply concerns are driving this move in the form of unrest in Egypt. Facing threats of a military-led ouster by a Wednesday deadline, Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi rebuffed threats and vowed to stay at the head of the government. In an escalation to the Mubarak protests from 2011, millions of protestors have taken to the street to demonstrate. With Morsi vowing to stay in office and the military threatening intervention, pressure on oil prices will remain.

Gold Recovery Stalled by Dollar’s Strong Rebound
An unchecked recovery effort isn’t in the cards for gold. The precious metal closed in the red following the previous two days of hearty rally. The 0.7 percent slip is hardly eye watering; but it steals all the wind from the badly demoralized bulls. Given the extent of the selloff over the past quarter, the fundamental drive to support a rally is far greater than it would be under different conditions. As such, budding troubles in the Eurozone’s periphery, the wealth erosion in higher energy prices and persistent stimulus efforts by global central banks – all weights to traditional currencies – still can’t put the metal on pace. Meanwhile, ETF holdings of the commodity dropped for the 20th consecutive trading session and volume eased back to levels from that preceded the June collapse.

**For a full list of upcoming event risk and past releases, go to www.dailyfx.com/calendar

ECONOMIC DATA

GMT

Currency

Release

Survey

Previous

Comments

1:00

CNY

PMI Non-Manufacturing (JUN)

54.3

Previous print was the worst this year as concerns over Chinese growth continue.

1:00

AUD

HIA New Home Sales (MoM) (MAY)

3.9%

As traders play the Aussi as a proxy for a Chinese slowdown, any disappointing trade balance data will give the shorts more fuel.

1:30

AUD

Trade Balance (Australian dollar) (MAY)

53M

28M

1:30

AUD

Retail Sales s.a. (MoM) (MAY)

0.3%

0.2%

1:45

CNY

HSBC Purchasing Manager Index Services (JUN)

51.2

The reading may take a hit as spikes in inter-bank exchange rates the past few weeks have stirred concern.

7:45

EUR

Italian Purchasing Manager Index Services (JUN)

47.0

46.5

Italian PMI data has shown contraction for two years with France for almost a year. Germany continues to show expansion, but the Euro-Zone overall print has struggled to rise above 50 since early 2012.

7:50

EUR

French Purchasing Manager Index Services (JUN F)

46.5

46.5

7:55

EUR

German Purchasing Manager Index Services (JUN F)

51.3

51.3

8:00

EUR

Euro-Zone PMI Services (JUN F)

48.6

48.6

8:00

EUR

Euro-Zone PMI Index Composite (JUN F)

48.9

48.9

8:30

GBP

Purchasing Manager Index Services (JUN)

55.0

54.9

UK PMI has managed to stay above 50 for almost all prints since mid 2009.

8:30

GBP

Official Reserves (Changes) (JUN)

-$1559M

9:00

EUR

Euro-Zone Retail Sales (MoM) (MAY)

0.3%

-0.5%

Survey’s point to a slight rise MoM despite bearish sentiment emanating from the Eurozone in recent weeks.

9:00

EUR

Euro-Zone Retail Sales (YoY) (MAY)

-2.0%

-1.1%

11:00

USD

MBA Mortgage Applications (JUN 28)

-3.0%

As mortgage rates touch the highest levels in years, applications this month may take a hit.

11:30

USD

Challenger Job Cuts (YoY) (JUN)

-41.2%

The ADP report will be a strong lead in to Friday’s NPFs – itself a key measure for Taper speculation. Trade figures weigh domestic consumption, foreign growth strength and dollar influence on global trade

12:15

USD

ADP Employment Change (JUN)

160K

135K

12:30

USD

Trade Balance (MAY)

-$40.2B

-$40.3B

12:30

USD

Initial Jobless Claims (JUN 29)

345K

346K

12:30

USD

Continuing Claims (JUN 22)

2965K

12:30

CAD

International Merchandise Trade (C$) (MAY)

-0.70B

-0.57B

The print has remained negative for much of the past year and a half.

14:00

USD

ISM Non-Manufacturing Composite (JUN)

54.2

53.7

Continued growth in sentiment points to a sooner rather than later taper.

14:30

USD

DOE U.S. Crude Oil Inventories (JUN 28)

18K

Inventory levels will be close watched be futures traders as the summer season of travel ramps up in the US.

14:30

USD

DOE U.S. Gasoline Inventories (JUN 28)

3653K

23:50

JPY

Japan Buying Foreign Bonds (Yen) (JUN 28)

-1187.5B

23:50

JPY

Japan Buying Foreign Stocks (Yen) (JUN 28)

13.9B

23:50

JPY

Foreign Buying Japan Bonds (Yen) (JUN 28)

-1047.3B

23:50

JPY

Foreign Buying Japan Stocks (Yen) (JUN 28)

171.2B

GMT

Currency

Upcoming Events & Speeches

1:00

AUD

Australia to Sell A$700 Mln in 14-Year Bonds

-:-

EUR

European Commission Banking Structure Reform Consult Ends

17:30

EUR

Greek Ambassador Bikas Speaks on Crisis (Off the Record)

SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE LEVELS

To see updated SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE LEVELS for the Majors, visit Technical Analysis Portal

To see updated PIVOT POINT LEVELS for the Majors and Crosses, visit our Pivot Point Table

CLASSIC SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE

EMERGING MARKETS 18:00 GMT

SCANDIES CURRENCIES 18:00 GMT

Currency

USD/MXN

USD/TRY

USD/ZAR

USD/HKD

USD/SGD

Currency

USD/SEK

USD/DKK

USD/NOK

Resist 2

15.0000

2.0000

10.7000

7.8165

1.3650

Resist 2

7.5800

5.8950

6.1750

Resist 1

13.4000

1.9500

10.2500

7.8075

1.3250

Resist 1

6.8155

5.8300

6.1150

Spot

13.0005

1.9175

9.9450

7.7571

1.2652

Spot

6.7258

5.7084

6.0309

Support 1

12.9500

1.9100

9.3700

7.7490

1.2000

Support 1

6.0800

5.6075

5.9365

Support 2

12.0000

1.6500

8.9500

7.7450

1.1800

Support 2

5.8085

5.4440

5.7400

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

1.3189

1.5411

100.32

0.9538

1.0574

0.9381

0.7917

131.11

153.05

Resist. 2

1.3158

1.5375

99.95

0.9513

1.0551

0.9350

0.7889

130.61

152.51

Resist. 1

1.3127

1.5340

99.57

0.9488

1.0527

0.9318

0.7861

130.12

151.98

Spot

1.3066

1.5269

98.83

0.9437

1.0480

0.9255

0.7805

129.13

150.90

Support 1

1.3005

1.5198

98.09

0.9386

1.0433

0.9192

0.7749

128.14

149.82

Support 2

1.2974

1.5163

97.71

0.9361

1.0409

0.9160

0.7721

127.65

149.28

Support 3

1.2943

1.5127

97.34

0.9336

1.0386

0.9129

0.7693

127.15

148.74

v

— Written by: John Kicklighter, Chief Strategist for DailyFX.com

To contact John, email jkicklighter@dailyfx.com. Follow me on twitter at http://www.twitter.com/JohnKicklighter

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Source: Daily fx