Dollar Skittish Below 12 Year High Risk, Monetary Policy Themes Heat Up

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Talking Points:

  • Dollar Skittish Below 12 Year High Risk, Monetary Policy Themes Heat Up

  • Euro: What Should we Expect from the ECB, Greece Today?

  • Australian Dollar Holds Precarious Floor after Chinese GDP Hits 6-Year Low

Dollar Skittish Below 12 Year High Risk, Monetary Policy Themes Heat Up

With the USDollar testing the 12-year highs established in March, the currency was once again faced with an important question: is there enough conviction to extend the incredible nine-month bull trend? This decision seemed to be more than the data and general conviction of the market were ready to answer as the market chose the path of least resistance – a pullback from the highs. There isn’t room for the Greenback to retreat before the tone of the market turns into concerted selling. This isn’t just true of the Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index. There isn’t much room for the Dollar to slip with EURUSD, GBPUSD, USDJPY or USDCAD before speculators would consider it a tide shift. That puts the pressure on the market to make a decision. The question is whether we have a fundamental banner to unite speculators’ efforts.

This past session, the US docket offered meaningful updates to the themes that have kept the currency’s reins these past months; but they didn’t seem to hit the timbre necessary to motivate speculators. The surface level event risk was factory level inflation data (PPI), the NFIB small business optimism survey and US earnings. All three carried a tone of disappointment. Wells Fargo, JPMorgan and Intel managed to beat the market expected EPS numbers to retrench the growth and investment backdrop for the US; but earnings forecasts have generally been lowered regularly for some time now and the underlying figures do not look so rosy. An extension of the price figure slowdown generates little surprise and the sentiment report is offset by the general bull trend for the headline and wage projections. For those watching US rates – most USD traders – more interesting was NY Fed’s consumer survey which showed the second highest wage earnings growth report in the series’ history (to June 2013) and a new fourth vote from the Cleveland Fed to hike the discount rate (7-4) according to minutes.

Ahead, there is plenty of scheduled event risk to weigh for the Greenback. Direct listings include the TIC capital flows report for February, the FOMC’s Beige Book and a few Fed speeches. However, for sheer market influence, the Dollar may find stronger winds from counterparts responding to Chinese GDP and the ECB rate decision. If not, the market may wait until Friday’s CPI to stir rate timing.