Dollar Extends 11 Year Highs, Equities Tumble…It’s Not a Coincidence

Talking Points:

Dollar Extends 11 Year Highs, Equities Tumble…It’s Not a Coincidence
Euro Traders Have to Worry About Greece Again
New ZealandDollar Faces RBNZ – Will They Follow RBA, BoC?

Dollar Extends 11 Year Highs, Equities Tumble…It’s Not a Coincidence

Over the past months, the Dollar and US equities have developed an unusual positive correlation. That relationship has taken a hard turn as of late however. When investor sentiment is driven towards an extreme (whether ‘greed’ or ‘fear’), the desire for excessive returns or liquidity will typically line these two benchmarks up at opposite ends of the spectrum. What results is a negative correlation borne of ‘risk trends’. Over the past months – and arguably stretching back over the past few years – conviction has tempered. That led to a ‘status quo’ attitude for stock traders and a focus on rate speculation for the currency. Both themes would engender gains for their respective markets. Yet, over time, the growing certainty over a move to normalize US monetary policy has started to erode the positive drift of complacency. As D-Day – the first hike – draws closer, the short-term and tactical temperament of the market shifts increasingly towards safety and liquidity.

The question that traders face is the measure of conviction that sentiment is genuinely turning and whether if the fermentation will gain momentum. There have been plenty of brief spats of high correlation, speculative rebalancing over the past years. The best measures are persistence and breadth in the effort to shift capital from high-return assets to havens. The Dollar is ready to take advantage of its liquidity status, but this is likely offering limited strength even with the recent S&P 500 pullback (Tuesday marked the second largest daily drop by the benchmark in five months). Instead, we are likely in the transitional phase before risk aversion truly sets in. Still holding up the bulk of the Greenback’s move is the solidified rate advantage. Fed Funds futures still depart from analysts in pricing an October 28 first hike (the latter see June 18), but the gap is slowly closing. There is little scheduled on the docket ahead to work on this disparity, but speculation is proving more than capital of rousing conviction. Meanwhile, the Fed will report its review of SIFIs’ plans for corporate actions.

Euro Traders Have to Worry About Greece Again

The Euro dropped against all of its counterparts this past session. While some attribute this move to the start of the ECB’s QE program on Monday, it is unlikely that there is a lot of drive behind this given we’ve known about the program since January and the details were made known last Thursday. That being said, this will definitely keep a slow simmering bearish pressure on the currency. More unsettling are recent waves from Greece. While officials have ‘bought time’ by extending negotiations, we are being reminded of the tense situation with a German documentary (it’s unclear when it was filmed) showing Greek Finance Minister Varoufakis remarking that it was clear Greece was bankrupt in 2010. With that in mind, technical talks about the country’s emerging funding are set to begin today…

New Zealand Dollar Faces RBNZ – Will They Follow RBA, BoC?

The RBNZ is scheduled to deliberate monetary policy Wednesday evening (Thursday morning in Wellington), and the expectations are for no change in policy. Overnight swaps are pricing a mere 4 percent chance of a rate cut at this meeting and 15 bps worth of total easing over the coming 12 months. That said, given the shift of many countries towards accommodation – particularly in Asia as well as with the RBA and BoC – there is growing pressure for the New Zealand bank to conform. Adding to the pressure, authorities recently voiced concern about a possible housing bubble that cannot be curbed by normal policy chances for risk of undermining a much more restrained economic performance.

British Pound Still Trails Dollar Rate Run Despite a BoE Tone Similar to Fed’s

BoE Governor Carney testified before the House of Lords this past session. He reiterated that inflation will remain close to zero for much of 2015, most of the weakness was due to commodity prices (a transient factor). He also noted that output growth remained solid, evidence of wage growth was increasing and there were strong investment intentions. If we didn’t know the name of the commenter, it would seem similar to the Fed’s view – perhaps even more hawkish. And yet, the BoE’s first rate hike is seen on the cusp of 2015 and 2016.

Chinese Yuan Struggles Despite Improved Data

The Chinese Renminbi’s tumble versus the Dollar has leveled out this week, but the pressure remains. Like the Euro, the China’s currency is losing ground against the Greenback for its divergent policy bearing (it cut rates a second time in four months recently) and concerns over financial troubles (NPLs) continue to hamper international capital inflow. Despite the market’s misgivings over China’s health, data has recently seen a significant improvement over forecasts – seen in Citi’s economic surprise index. There will be plenty to chew on today.

Emerging Markets Currencies Extend Collapse Versus Greenback

The tumble for the emerging markets is gathering pace. The MSCI’s EM ETF posted its worst daily drop in six weeks (2.2 percent) on the heaviest volume in the same amount of time. General risk aversion is finding a soft target for these already battered regions that face a diminished appetite for exports amongst developed world counterparts as well as the trouble with ‘importing’ the detrimental influence of an impending FOMC rate hike. Among high level moves, the Mexican Peso and Brazilian Real hit record lows.

Gold Offers Little Comfort for Haven Seekers as it Drops 7 Straight Days

Risk aversion has kicked in over the past week, yet that has conferred little benefit to gold. In fact, when valued in gold – its primary pricing instrument – it continues to tumble. The precious metal is in fact down for seven straight days on that standard for the worst series since May 2013. We haven’t seen an 8 day stumble since March 2009. The trouble for gold is that the risk aversion move is not yet full scale and indiscriminate. As such, liquidity with a higher yield potential (aka the Dollar), is still more appetizing.

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ECONOMIC DATA

GMT

Currency

Release

Survey

Previous

Comments

23:30

AUD

Westpac Consumer Confidence Index (March)

100.7

Has been rising after Dec 2014 after trending lower last year.

23:50

JPY

PPI (YoY) (FEB)

0.4%

0.3%

Inflation can be affected by price pressures from the producer side. BOJ has stated that QQE will occur until inflation is at 2%.

00:30

AUD

Home Loans (MoM) (JAN)

-2.0%

2.7%

Last figure’s home loan increase was the largest on a MoM basis since Sep 2013.

00:30

AUD

Investment Lending (MoM) (JAN)

6.4%

00:30

AUD

Owner-Occupier Loan Value (JAN)

3.5%

5:30

CNY

China Retail Sales YTD (YoY) (FEB)

11.6%

12.0%

Increased at an average of 12% in 2014. China’s government is trying to make the economy more service oriented.

5:30

CNY

Industrial Production YTD (YOY) (FEB)

7.7%

8.3%

Growth rate has been trending lower in the past five years.

5:30

CNY

Fixed Asset Ex Rural YTD (YoY) (FEB)

15.0%

15.7%

7:00

EUR

Labor Costs (YoY) (4Q)

2.3%

Has started to show a pick up in growth rate after March 2014.

9:30

GBP

Manufacturing Production (MoM) (JAN)

0.2%

0.1%

Has showed a positive increase on a YoY basis in 2014. UK data has been outperforming economists’ expectations lately.

9:30

GBP

Manufacturing Production (YoY) (JAN)

2.6%

2.4%

11:00

USD

MBA Mortgage Applications (Mar 6)

0.1%

A volatile measure that could indicate future housing demand.

15:00

GBP

NIESR GDP Estimate (FEB)

0.7%

Any strong measure would likely weigh on investors’ expectations for future BOE policy. OIS show that the market expects the central bank to hike rates by 25bps over the next 12 months.

20:00

NZD

RBNZ Official Cash Rate

3.50%

3.50%

OIS show that there is a 4% chance of the RBNZ cutting rates at this meeting. Watch a Webinar that covers the Decision.

GMT

Currency

Upcoming Events & Speeches

8:00

EUR

ECB President Mario Draghi Speaks in Frankfurt

8:30

EUR

ECB Executive Board Member Peter Praet Speaks in Frankfurt

-:-

EUR

Greece-Troika to Begin Technical Talks on Emergency Financing

10:15

EUR

ECB’s Liikanen Debates Monetary Policy in Frankfurt

11:00

GBP

BOE Report on Supervision of Financial Market Infrastructures

13:00

EUR

ECB’s Nowotny Speaks in Frankfurt

15:00

GBP

BOE’s Weale Speaks at Event in London

16:00

CAD

Canada to Sell 30-Year Real Return Bond

17:00

USD

US to Sell $21-Bln in 10yr Note

20:05

NZD

RBNZ Governor Wheeler News Conference

20:30

USD

USD Fed Releases Results of Second Set of Stress Tests

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

16.5000

2.7500

13.8500

7.8165

1.4505

Resist 2

9.3300

7.3650

8.5270

Resist 1

16.0000

2.7000

12.6500

7.8075

1.4275

Resist 1

8.7400

7.1000

8.4735

Spot

15.6082

2.6376

12.3559

7.7605

1.3849

Spot

8.5536

6.9589

8.0919

Support 1

14.5000

2.3580

11.3500

7.7490

1.3635

Support 1

8.2675

6.4725

7.8360

Support 2

13.6800

2.2850

10.8500

7.7450

1.3425

Support 2

7.8150

6.3325

7.2945

INTRA-DAY PROBABILITY BANDS 18:00 GMT

CCY

EUR/USD

GBP/USD

USD/JPY

USD/CHF

USD/CAD

AUD/USD

NZD/USD

EUR/JPY

Gold

Res 3

1.0834

1.5249

122.56

1.0095

1.2809

0.7735

0.7379

131.42

1187.82

Res 2

1.0802

1.5208

122.25

1.0065

1.2777

0.7711

0.7355

131.04

1182.04

Res 1

1.0771

1.5167

121.93

1.0035

1.2744

0.7688

0.7331

130.66

1176.25

Spot

1.0708

1.5084

121.31

0.9976

1.2679

0.7641

0.7283

129.89

1164.69

Supp 1

1.0645

1.5001

120.69

0.9917

1.2614

0.7594

0.7235

129.12

1153.13

Supp 2

1.0614

1.4960

120.37

0.9887

1.2581

0.7571

0.7211

128.74

1147.34

Supp 3

1.0582

1.4919

120.06

0.9857

1.2549

0.7547

0.7187

128.36

1141.56

— 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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