Dollar Rebounds after Greece Decision Delayed, EUR/USD Ranges
  • Dollar Rebounds after Greece Decision Delayed, EUR/USD Ranges

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Dollar Rebounds after Greece Decision Delayed, EUR/USD Ranges

The dollar spent Tuesday slowly drifting higher as the sharp risk aversion move over the open 24 hours of trading this week consolidated. That slow drift found a considerable accelerant early this morning, however, as the market learned that European policy officials had once again deferred making a decisive call on how to proceed with Greece’s financial aid – the linchpin to one of the financial market’s greatest fundamental threats. Without a solution on hand to a market-wide threat, the comfort of dollar liquidity looks considerably more appealing. From a risk assessment, we find S&P 500 futures have taken a quick turn lower having held the well-worn resistance at 1,390/88. On the FX side, EURUSD collapsed 80 pips while the AUDUSD dropped 40 pips. For the safe haven dollar itself, the Dow Jones FXCM Dollar (ticker = USDollar) has extended its climb from Tuesday’s 10,000-mark test. A turn in risk is one thing. A sustained trend is something else completely though…

News that Eurozone officials have prolonged the uncertainty surrounding their weakest link is a clear bearish weight on speculators shoulders. The longer this situation continues unsolved (or more appropriately, unprogressed), the less likely it is that global investors will be satiated by a lackluster solution. The underlying reality is that the long-term situation in Europe, Asia and the United States is murky and not being met with clear and lasting reform (instead, officials seem to be betting on a ‘general improvement’ in market conditions or other external development like exports or stimulus). Yet, traders are willing to overlook the lack of a long-term solution so long as they see the opportunity to speculate for short-term gain in the interim. With each temporary effort to buy time and subsequent return to critical structural issues, we find the market less willing to play along with the short-lived risk rally. That speaks to a fundamental shift where deleveraging and dollar advance grow more permanent.