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Last week, the U.S. Dollar closed lower against a basket of the currencies. However, it wasn’t an ordinary weakness, it was a technical closing price reversal top, which means the selling was serious. If confirmed this week, we could see the start of a two to three-week correction. Furthermore, if the selling pressure intensifies over the near-term, we could even see a change in trend to down.
Last week, the December U.S. Dollar Index settled at 96.333, down 0.401 or -0.41%.
Although it is often said, that technical analysis precedes the fundamentals, this time the potentially bearish chart pattern appears to be working in sync with a change in the fundamentals.
For years, we’ve read that the dollar is being supported by the divergence in monetary policy between the hawkish U.S. Federal Reserve and the dovish central banks. In other words, rising U.S. interest rates at a time when several central banks are still holding rates at historically low levels, have made the dollar a highly desirable asset.
We’ve also read that at times, the dollar was being treated as a safe-haven asset. The “go to” asset during times of financial stress. This has been a popular investment theme in 2018 because of the heightened volatility in the stock market, political uncertainty in Washington and geopolitical uncertainty over Brexit and the simmering tension between Italy and the European Union. Furthermore, the stress created from the lingering trade dispute between the United States and China, has also draw investors into the relative safety of the U.S. Dollar.
Dollar Struggles at 16-month High
Early last week, the U.S. Dollar hit a 16-month high against a basket of currency. The move occurred without much fanfare because investors have gotten used to the stronger dollar. The early rally was fueled by safe-haven flows ignited by political uncertainties in Europe and fears of a global economic slowdown.
The headlines told us that investor confidence had been eroded by “bitter trade tensions between the United States and China, fears of a no-deal Brexit, and a standoff between Rome and Brussels over Italy’s deficit-deepening budget.”
The headlines also said the U.S. Federal Reserve is set to raise rates by 25 basis points in December. This was even supported by the CME group’s Fed Watch tool, which put the probability of a December rate hike at 75 percent.
Despite all these typically supportive factors, the U.S. Dollar Index posted a potentially bearish closing price reversal top. The chart pattern suggests that the selling is greater than the buying at current price levels.