Posted on: 07 Feb, 2019
The US Dollar has been catapulted to new highs for the month, even if the reinvigorated rally is far from enjoying a positive backdrop if we look at US government yields. The micro and macro flows through US fixed income portray a much uglier picture not backing the USD strength story.
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The US Dollar has been catapulted to new highs for the month, even if the reinvigorated rally is far from enjoying a positive backdrop if we look at US government yields. The micro and macro flows through US fixed income portray a much uglier picture not backing the USD strength story.
It is clear that the market has temporarily decoupled from treating the US Dollar (DXY) as a by-product of a country’s attractiveness, or lack thereof, towards its deteriorating sovereign bond yields. As I mention in twitter today:
If you pay attention to the latest movements in G6 FX bond yields, you will notice that there is just simply no better place to hide fundamentally speaking, which may help to understand why the latest dynamics in currency flows keep supporting the US Dollar even as US yields drop and equities hold steady.
The EU Economic Forecasts report, even if it just serves as further anecdotal evidence, it should highlight the headwinds faced by the EU. Note, these are forecasts for EU member-states for the next 2 years and will provide further light on the negative trends in several EU member states.
The Bank of England will resort to a wait-and-see mode when it meets today. Its policy remains highly dependable to Brexit with the Bank of England likely to emphasize the risks of a hard Brexit.
As James Smith, Economist at ING notes, “deteriorating economic data and increasing political uncertainty means we’re unlikely to get a Bank of England rate hike any time soon — although the recent strength in wage growth means a move later in 2019 shouldn’t be completely ruled out.”
In the Brexit front, UK PM May is scheduled to meet EU’s Juncker in an encounter with the bar set very low in terms of hopes for any concessions that the UK may obtain from the EU. Watch for headlines from key policy-makers, although at this stage, the rhetoric has clearly shifted to a hard-line stance respecting the terms and conditions of the agreed UK-EU divorce deal.
The microflows and macrostructure have clearly gravitated towards an isolated DXY strength. However, such a rampant USD run-up is not backed up by US yields, which makes the rally, theoretically, not as fundamentally strong as it lacks the policy outlook component via higher government bond yields. Overall, the risk profile is still categorized as ‘weak risk off’ in both flows and structures. The lack of progress in equities in the last 24h is keeping risk rather suppressed in the Forex market, which should promote a stronger JPY unless equities resume the move up with vigor.
Just plain ugly the hints sent by bond vigilantes out there. Macro-wise, nearly all G6 FX monitored are in 10+ days of bull flattening runs from peak to trough (US, CA exception w/bull steepeners). Australian government yields telegraph a rate cut near-term after the drop in yields in a steepener context.
A sign of how little alternatives exist out there, the 5-day run-up in the USD index, with a significant acceleration in the last 2d, occurs in the context of bull flattener dynamics = The currency moves higher as bond traders price in decelerating US GDP + low inflation.
Wonder what’s the yield curve in a bond? It’s really critical to understand what the market is pricing in terms of Central Bank policies going forward. Learn the basics in this article.
Exc commodity currencies, FX options market not as bullish on the US Dollar heading into Thursday. USD/JPY impl vol rising a tad as 25-delta RR drops back sub -1 all while 110.00 macro resistance tested. If the DXY starts rolling over, UJ may have some catch down to do w/lower US30y.
* The 25-delta risk reversal is the result of calculating the vol of the 25 delta call and discount the vol of the 25 delta put. … A positive risk reversal (call premiums rise vs puts) tends to be a bullish signal to expect higher spot prices according to option traders and vice versa if put premiums increase vs calls.
Source: http://cmegroup.quikstrike.net (The RR settles are ready ~1am UK).
EUR/USD: Non-Volatile Downward Channel, Sellers in Firm Control
The picture is undeniably bearish. For the technical-type traders, this is one of the best environment to trade as the trend is evolving in a fairly regular and non-volatile manner. The moves up are very much corrective in nature while the decline are much more impulsive. These dynamics speak loud and clear about the clear supply imbalances, which is resulting in a conducive order flow if one is looking to engage in a purely technical-led momentum trade dismissing other factors. Why do I mention dismissing other factors? Because this is not a trend backed up by the German vs US bond yield spread, as the blue line clearly demonstrates (major divergence). It’s all about the rude strength of the DXY across the board as depicted by the magenta line. Regardless, when factoring intermarket analysis and volumes, one could make the case that any major technical area, as 1.1350–55 (horizontal support-bottom channel) could represent a solid proposition to stay relatively constructive in faking overextensions. However, one is going to need price action evidence for that, as the non-volatile/regular trends are the toughest to fight. If 1.1350 gives in, we could be looking into a potential acceleration towards 1.13. If the intermarket analysis stays as divergent vs price as it is today, that may create genuine buying opportunities.
GBP/USD: Topside Retest Rejected, Risk Of Follow-Through
The hourly chart exhibits enough technical credence to believe the downward pressure may continue in the near-term as the negative Brexit headlines keep piling in. The topside rejection of a short-term dynamic resistance in the form of a trendline off Feb 4th peak suggests any demand imbalance remains very weak in nature. The current conditions are characterized as an acceptance of price within a narrow range of 1.2975–1.2930, with a downward resolution to target a potential 100% extension of the range size towards the 1.2885 before price stabilizes. Both the UK-US bond yield spread (blue) and the DXY (magenta) strength are in alignment to exert further selling pressure.
USD/JPY: Range Phase W/Topside Heavily Offered
It’s been 5 times that the rate has attempted to break past the 110.00, and every time, the same selling pressure is found. Can we resort to intermarket analysis to try to understand why such cluster of offers at 110.00 is so heavy? Yes, we can. Not only it represents a major maco resistance, which by itself makes it richer in liquidity, but we should not forget that the last 2 days worth of DXY gains occur in the content of a bull flattener phase, which essentially means lower US yields (as the 30-yr US bond yield in green reflects). That’s adding extra selling pressure circa 110.00. Besides, the M type formation (read potential double bottom) in the S&P 500 as the orange line shows, is another factor capping the upside potential for now. The market remains stubbornly bid due to the rampant movements seen in the DXY, as the magenta line shows. Technically, we’ve entered range-bound conditions between 110.00 and 109.50–55. Buying or selling off the edges offers the best risk-reward. The midpoint of the range at 109.80 (tested several times) can be used as reference to gauge the side most in control of price action. Since the range was established on Feb 5th, bulls have managed to find equilibrium on the upper half far more often than sellers sub 109.80, which for now is a testament that the buy-side interest remains strong and unlikely to go away unless the DXY rolls over.
AUD/USD: Smoked As Aus Yields Fall Sharply
To understand the brutal mark-down in the Aussie in the last 24h, one must resort to the re-anchoring of the correlation between the currency pair and its yield spread as investors finally pay much closer attention to domestic factors in the Australian economy. This newly found correlation with the AU vs US bond yield spread has been running on a factor above 0.75/0.80 for most of the week. As of Feb 7th in the Asian session, the spread keeps widening in favour of the US, which should act as an underpinning element to keep the sell-side pressure well and alive. To top it off, the Aussie has found even further sell-side pressure from the rude strength in the DXY, as the magenta line depicts (it also includes the Chinese Yuan factored in). The next level of key support for the Aussie can be found circa 0.7075–0.7080 ahead of 0.7050 (demand imbalance Jan 7th).
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