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What Would Make This Dollar Bull Nervous

Summary:
Summary: USD had a large rally in November. We had been looking for a short and shallow pullback. Here are thoughts about what would signal an outright correction.   The Federal Reserve’s real broad trade weighted dollar index rose 2.3% in November.  This is the largest monthly advance since September 2011.   This is the measure that officials and economists use to try to assess how the currency movement impact financial conditions and the economy. The recent string of economic data has been generally better than expected.  Not only will Q3 GDP likely be revised up again, but many economists are revising up their forecasts for the performance here in Q4.  The market fully discounts one rate hike next year, and is well on its way to discounting a second hike as well.  While two hikes is beginning to seem the consensus as next year’s forecasts are constructed, a third hike looks more likely than just one.  In any event, no other major central bank will be able to keep pace with the Fed. In addition to the continued policy divergence, European politics, and the risk of another victory for the populist-nationalist forces may also weigh on the euro.  Three elections are planned–Dutch, French and German–but the probability of a British, Italian and Austrian election is above zero.

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Summary:

USD had a large rally in November.

We had been looking for a short and shallow pullback.

Here are thoughts about what would signal an outright correction.

 

The Federal Reserve’s real broad trade weighted dollar index rose 2.3% in November.  This is the largest monthly advance since September 2011.   This is the measure that officials and economists use to try to assess how the currency movement impact financial conditions and the economy.

The recent string of economic data has been generally better than expected.  Not only will Q3 GDP likely be revised up again, but many economists are revising up their forecasts for the performance here in Q4.  The market fully discounts one rate hike next year, and is well on its way to discounting a second hike as well.  While two hikes is beginning to seem the consensus as next year’s forecasts are constructed, a third hike looks more likely than just one.  In any event, no other major central bank will be able to keep pace with the Fed.

In addition to the continued policy divergence, European politics, and the risk of another victory for the populist-nationalist forces may also weigh on the euro.  Three elections are planned–Dutch, French and German–but the probability of a British, Italian and Austrian election is above zero.  We have argued that many investors may be focused on the the wrong event this weekend (Italy instead of Austria) and the same may happen next year too.  Investors seem more concerned about France and Germany, while the populist-nationalist Freedom Party is running ahead in the Dutch polls.

The US Dollar Index (DXY), which is not a trade-weighted basket, but a tradable basket of foreign currencies heavily weighted toward Europe.  The three-week advance is at risk.  It is off about 0.25% and there is still tomorrow’s US employment data to digest.  However, we anticipated a shallow dollar pullback and so far that is what has materialized.

We also expected the pullback to be short-lived.  For that the jury is still out.  What would suggest a deeper correction is a break of 100.65.  That is the low from November 22 and November 28, and looks to be the neckline of a potential topping pattern, perhaps a derivative of a head and shoulder pattern.     A break would likely be the first sign that the consolidation is turning in to an outright correction.  The first target would be around 99.70 the 38.2% retracement of the post-election dollar rally.  However, the potential topping pattern would have a measuring objective of closer to 99.00, which corresponds to a 50% retracement of the post-election dollar rally.

To be clear, this is not about my longer-term outlook for the US dollar.  It is about a near-term tactical scenario, not the long-term strategic view.

US Dollar Currency Index, December 02

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What Would Make This Dollar Bull Nervous

. Source: FT.com - Click to enlarge

Marc Chandler
He has been covering the global capital markets in one fashion or another for more than 30 years, working at economic consulting firms and global investment banks. After 14 years as the global head of currency strategy for Brown Brothers Harriman, Chandler joined Bannockburn Global Forex, as a managing partner and chief markets strategist as of October 1, 2018.

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