US Dollar Consolidation Continues

 | Aug 08, 2017 12:04

Originally published by AxiTrader

Welcome to the Forex Today column.

In it, I'll be trying to add a bit more colour and a lot more charts than I do in my broader overnight market Wrap I do first thing every morning to set myself and my trading up for each day and each week.

h2 RECAP/h2

Not every day in markets is a banner day with big narratives. Not even most days are like that.

But in watching the moves, the price actions, the economics, the positioning, and the technicals, it is possible to see how the narrative is changing and while that may only be one degree at a time it still informs where prices and levels might move through time.

Last night was one such time. We saw a consolidation of the US dollar's big rally on Friday against most major pairs. It's a sign the dollar's move was more than just a one off - or knee jerk - reaction to non-farms. But the lack of follow through is a sign traders and investors are still wary, of US data, of US politics, and of a potential government shutdown as the debt ceiling draws closer.

It all added up to inside days for the EUR/USD, AUD/USD, USD/CHF, USD/JPY among others. Canadian dollar and kiwi remain pressure however and the pound is on the cusp.

h2 HERE'S A DEEPER DIVE - IN A LITTLE MORE DETAIL AND WITH A FEW CHARTS/h2

So, as I noted above, there were mostly only incremental moves in the US dollar for the most part overnight. That’s natural after such a big move on Friday night in the wake of the better than expected non-farm payrolls print. So this morning we have the euro a little higher up 0.2% at 1.1790, sterling largely unchanged at 1.3033, and the yen likewise with USD/JPY sitting at 110.74.

But the continued pressure on the commodity bloc – USD/CAD up 0.21% to 1.2679, AUD/USD down 0.19% at 0.7904, and the kiwi off a stonking 0.7% at 0.7354 – points to the divergence I noted last week which suggested to me the US dollar and its outlook is turning.

Naturally I argue a big part of that has been the turn in US data at it starts to marginally beat expectations again.

So on that front it is worth noting the Citibank economic Surprise index for the United States is back above -40!

That’s the first time that the index has climbed back above this level since early June when the deterioration in US data was in full flight. Naturally at -39.1 the data flow has not been brilliant recently. But it is on the improve relative to expectations and that is important for US rates, bonds, the Fed, and the US dollar.

It's also important when we see data like German IP last night. The fall of 1.1% came out of nowhere and has been largely discounted by traders and economists. That may be the right course of action. But it is worth noting EU data has been trending weaker in terms of the Citi Econ Surprise index lately - it's aat +13.3 from April's +70 highs.

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So let's look at a few charts then.

EUR/USD is showing signs of topping. I have a sell signal, but I'm not yet short. For that to happen price would need to decline below yesterday's low of 1.1768. A break of 1.1720 would be a good sign for the bears though...it has to break first though.