Corrective Forces Still Dominate

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Markets were calmer. The three-month implied volatility of all the major currencies fell, led by the usually high-beta dollar bloc. The VIX, which measures the volatility of the S&P 500 snapped a five-day decline ahead of the weekend. The volatility of the Treasury market (MOVE) also eased. The risk is of higher volatility into the end of what has been an historic first half.

The continued support that central banks and governments are providing underpins risk assets. However, a technical correction was signaled, and the momentum indicators warn it may not be complete. One symptom of this in the foreign exchange market is the fragmentation of some close currencies pairs. The Norwegian krone was the best performer of the majors, rising about 1% against the dollar, while the Swedish krona was the second-worst of the major currencies, losing about 0.8%.

The Australian dollar’s roughly 0.4% gain put it in third place (behind Nokkie and the yen), while the Kiwi was essentially flat in the middle of the pack. And consider that: The top two majors consisted of one risk-on currency and one risk-off currency. We see this move as corrective in nature, and therefore, want to remain sensitive to downside targets and levels that would suggest what we think is the underlying trend is resuming.

Dollar Index

The Dollar Index reached 97.70 ahead of the weekend, its highest level in two weeks. We had suggested it was retracing the drop that began on May 25 (~100.00), and at the high, it had retraced almost half of these losses. The next upside target is in the 97.85-98.15 area. The MACD and Slow Stochastic are trending higher, and the euro is near the middle of its Bollinger Band (i.e., close to the 20-day moving average). A week and a half uptrend line starts the new week around 97.15, and a break of 96.80 would likely confirm the correction is over.

Euro

The single currency was sold from about $1.1420 on June 10 to a little below $1.1170 before the weekend, and settled below $1.12 for the first time in nearly three weeks. Has the correction been completed, and is the euro ready to resume is recovery? The $1.1215 area was our initial retracement objective.

The next target is closer to $1.1150, and as we suggested last week, a move toward $1.1025 cannot be ruled out yet. The MACD and Slow Stochastic have only recently turned down from extreme levels. The downtrend line off the month’s high starts the new week near $1.1285, and the $1.1305-level is the midway point of the decline. A move above there warns of a running start back to the highs.