Chart Of The Day: Dollar's Complicated Dance Continues

 | Apr 19, 2021 23:33

Right now, the US dollar is languishing at a monthly low. That's because yields also fell in the same proportion over the same period.

Among other catalysts, the slump also comes courtesy of the Federal Reserve which has repeatedly said it will not raise rates. But investors are growing skeptical after the central bank first played down spiking yields as nothing more than faith in rising demand amid a reopening economy, ignoring the possibility of escalating inflation while vowing that rates will remain lower for longer even if the Fed's inflation targets are met.

Additionally, after a good run for the reflation trade in recent days, profit-taking was in order. Last week, value sectors such as Utilities (+3.7%) and Materials (+3%) led, while growth sectors Tech (+1.1%) and Communication Services (-0.1%) lagged.

As well, given that the reflation trade is based on rising inflation, it's becoming harder to deny that inflation itself isn't a market presence. After all, last week’s US consumer price releases indicated that CPI rose 0.6% for the month, 2.6% year-over-year.

That's the biggest jump for those metrics since 2008. While it does make a powerful case for vaulting inflation, traders would do well to keep things in proportion. First, those measures included a 23% spike in gas prices, which is why economists prefer the Core CPI metric, since it excludes volatile energy and food prices.

Second, the current measure of inflation is being compared to a period when the economy was shut down during the height of the pandemic. As such it doesn't necessarily represent a true comparative gauge for the immediate economic situation. Technicals are also signaling a complex story.