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U.S. Dollar Selling Eases, Is The Buck Prime For Rally?

Published 02/11/2021, 04:32 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM
·      USD Rebounds as Stocks Wobble
·      AUD Soars on Higher Inflation Expectations
·      CAD Unchanged as Oil Snaps 8-Day Rally
·      GBP Retreats Ahead of Q4 GDP
 
At the beginning of the year, the U.S. dollar hit a bottom and it hasn’t revisited those levels since January. However, sentiment is shifting, with the U.S. dollar pulling back this week. Much of that has to do with the persistent strength of U.S. equities. But as stocks consolidate and the gains moderate, investors are wondering if the bubble is beginning to deflate. This is important for currency traders because a large part of the dollar’s decline in 2020 was tied to the strength of equities. If stocks are at the cusp of a deeper correction, the dollar would be prime for a rally.
 
In the short term, there are many reasons why stocks could correct. As shown by today’s weaker jobless claims report and last week’s subdued payroll growth, the future is bright but current conditions are weak. Equities had a great run and a new speculative fervor has increased volatility. Last week it was GameStop (NYSE:GME), this week Reddit forums are all over cannabis stocks. They gained 51% in one day and lost almost the same amount in another. This level of hysteria can be very dangerous in an overextended market. 
 
The new South African variant has been reported in California. There are now four states with cases of this highly contagious variant that appears to be resistant to current vaccines. If it spreads quickly, it could spark a new fear that would send equities sharply lower and the U.S. dollar higher in the process. With that said, the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index is due for release tomorrow and the current vaccine rollout along with the continued rise in stocks should boost confidence.
 
Meanwhile, it is no surprise that commodity currencies continued to outperform European currencies. Virus cases are low, there are minimal restrictions and the summer weather is beautiful. The Australian dollar added another 0.4% to its gains thanks to stronger consumer inflation expectations. Inflation is rising across the globe but it is still at rates low enough for the central bank to be unconcerned. The New Zealand dollar shrugged off weaker credit card sales. Manufacturing data is due for release this afternoon and the ongoing recovery should lift activity. Oil prices dropped for the first time in nine trading days and this decline prevented the loonie from participating in the rally. 
 
The euro extended its gains, while sterling pulled back ahead of fourth quarter GDP. Although the resilience of the euro is remarkable considering Europe's slow vaccine rollout and strict lockdowns, the currency could reject the 50-day SMA at 1.2150 if Eurozone industrial production is weak. The UK’s fourth quarter GDP report is scheduled for release on Friday. Economists are looking for a slight increase, but with the government issuing very tough holiday restrictions, we think they would be lucky to eek out positive growth. 
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Latest comments

Stay invested. The dollar is not the right numeral to price equities. You are drawing correlations between publicly available data from the past and the future direction of the forex. You are not aware of what you write. Free speach is not meant for you
Always insightful - thanks
Hello Kathy, thanks. Could you elaborate why a stock market decline would prop the USD
supply and demand. You sell stock and buy dollars. So when you have excessive sell in equities you got high demand of dollars. So when you read risk on the usual play is long equities and short USD, with risk off vice verse.
Is this really a true explanation? Could also say as US equities rise there is more demand for USD as money flows in from outside the US.
Thanks Kathy, you're the best.
Good analysis from the columnist. Thanks.
The dollar died in 2008
Feds continuing to support swap lines, bank repo and mortgage loans at a rate of 120B per month... The Biden administration supporting the $2T Welfare Act and the deficit continuing to grow and you say dollar is ready for a rally? Are you really serious right now... So the Fed Fund rate will change with a stronger dollar while folks are still suffering from a pandemic, have used their life savings to survive because Congress was slow to Act and jobs are still being loss with pre-COVID employment is not slated to return until at least 2023 and beyond... GDP will shrink over the coming years, blah, blah, you guys must make this chit up as you go... Your write-up are complete garbage... no credibility...
The Fed is not looking to start bond selling until at least 2023 and with Congresses $2T Welfare Act why would that not dilute dollar further? You logic makes no sense at all... complete garbage...
Excessive money stimulus leads to higher bond yields, because bond investors demand more yield with inflation expectations, thus selling bonds with the hope to buy it later with higher yields. And higher yields are USD bullish.
Very good article. The possibility of a spring surge from the South African strain of the virus is very scary.
Thanks Kathy, very good information for Forx Traders.
Very informative, well written. Thank you
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