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US MBA mortgage data improves w-e 6 Jan
Better than previous mortgage data out earlier from the MBA 11 Jan
Philly Fed Dec business conditions index revised to +19.7 from +21.5
Revisions to the Philly fed
US December federal budget statement -$27.5B vs -$26B expected
The December budget deficit
Dollar Extends Losses As Trump Trade Unwinds
The U.S. dollar extended its losses on Thursday as investors continued to unwind their Trump trades. With just over a week until his inauguration, they hoped that Donald Trump would spend some time outlining the scope of his infrastructure plans. Unfortunately, the President-elect failed to do so Wednesday and the U.S. dollar dropped as a result. U.S. equities and Treasury yields also fell as investors across different asset markets expressed their unified disappointment. The selling on Wednesday carried through to Thursday but began to lose momentum during the New York trading session.
We believe it won’t be long before the dollar -- USD/JPY specifically -- find a bottom although we can’t rule out a final flush preceding the base. If we take a step back, the positive outlook for the U.S. economy has not changed since November. American companies are adding jobs, paying more wages and optimism is on the rise. Yes, there are concerns about Trump’s conflict of interests, his alleged relationship with Russia and other issues, but they don’t compromise his plans for tax cuts and big spending. While we are still waiting for Trump’s policy details, there is no reason to believe that he won’t be following through with his promise for tax cuts and spending. Even members of the Federal Reserve believe that the President-elect will deliver. A number of Federal Reserve Presidents spoke Thursday but only 2 are voting members of the FOMC this year (Evans and Harker). Both gentleman said 3 rate hikes in 2017 is plausible. Thursday morning’s U.S. economic reports also showed improvements in the economy with jobless claims increasing less than expected and import prices ticking up. Retail sales, producer prices and the University of Michigan consumer sentiment numbers are scheduled for release on Friday and these reports should confirm the improvements in the U.S. economy. Stronger data should be positive for the dollar with one small wrinkle -- the forecast for spending is very high. So if the data misses slightly, we may have an initial drop in USD/JPY that should be recovered quickly as investors realize that, ultimately, the data reflects a stronger economy.
US business inventories for November +0.7% vs +0.6% estimate
Up from prior month -0.1% (revised from -0.2% last).
The US business inventories increased by a greater than expected +0.7% vs +0.6%. This was the largest gain since June 2015.Dollar Correction May Be Over (Or Nearly So)
The correction in the capital markets began shortly after the Federal Reserve hiked rates on December 14. The correction or consolidative phase follows an otherwise strong trending quarter, where moves accelerated after the unexpected victory by Trump. Last week we still anticipated the correction could persist even after the January 4 US jobs report showed more earnings growth than expected. However, now after the additional losses, the dollar appears ready to turn.
Interest rates remain integral to our dollar narrative. It is not coincidental that the dollar's downside move coincided with a pullback in yields and a narrowing of the US premium. Interest rates may be the place to begin our review of the technical outlook.
The 10-year yield fell to nearly 2.30% on January 12, new lows since the end of November, before recovering to close at new session highs of 2.36%. Before the weekend, and despite if anything, softer PPI and disappointing retail sales figures, the yield rose another six basis point. The March note futures stalled at 125-10. It tried separate sessions sine January 6. After failing for the third time before the weekend, a sell-off ensued that brought the contract toward the week's low of 124-07, which is also a 38.2% retracement of the gains since December 15. The 50% retracement is found at 123-28, and the 61.8% retracement is at 123-17.
The 2-year yield peaked on December 15 at 1.30%. It pulled back to near 16 bp through January 12, when, like the 10-year note, the yield recovered and saw follow-through gains ahead of the weekend. After five closes below the 20-day moving average, the two yield closed above it (~1.21% ) before the weekend. The technical tone of the March 2-year note futures contract is deteriorating, which is also consistent with the completion of the corrective phase.
The Dollar Index completed a 38.2% retracement of its gains since the US election on January 12. The small gains before the weekend saw the RSI turn higher, while the MACDs and Slow Stochastics are getting ready to cross higher as well. A move above 102.00 would lend credence to this view and suggest a retest on the January 11 high near 103.00. On the downside, a convincing break of 100.65 could spur a move to the next retracement level near 99.80.
The technicals look further away from turning in the euro than the Dollar Index. A move above $1.0710 could signal a further recovery toward $1.0820. The euro has not closed below its five-day moving average, (~1.0590) since January 3. A potential trendline drawn from this year's lows comes in near $1.05 on January 16 and finishes the week near $1.0575. A violation of the five-day average on a closing basis or a break of the trendline would likely signal the upside correction phase for the euro has run its course.
The dollar initially saw follow through buying in Asia though Japan was on holiday, after the US employment data. The greenback was buoyed from JPY117.00 to JPY117.50. However, it was greeted with fresh selling versus the yen that ultimately drove the dollar to JPY113.75. The technical indicators we use have not turned, but they are getting stretched. A move above JPY115.60 could signal a move in the JPY116.20-JPY116.80 band.
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Allianz's El-Erian says USD strength is main risk to at least 3 rate hikes from the Fed
Allianz's chief economic adviser Mohammed El-Erian speaking in HK 16 Jan
December 2016 US CPI 2.1% vs 2.1% exp y/y
Details of the December 2016 US CPI data report 18 January 2017
US initial jobless claims 234k vs 254k exp
US initial jobless claims week ending 13 January 2016
US Dollar at Risk as Traders Cut Exposure Amid Information Vacuum
Fundamental Forecast for the US Dollar: Neutral
A mostly thin economic calendar leaves the US Dollar to ponder the implications of a still-murky fiscal policy of newly-minted President Donald Trump in the week ahead. The promise of generous stimulus initially stoked bets on faster growth and inflation, sending shares higher alongside the greenback as investors foresaw richer earnings and a steeper Fed rate hike cycle. The absence of details has soured optimism however and the currency has been mostly on the defensive since the calendar turned to 2017.
Big-ticket fundamental news-flow does not enter the picture until Friday, when market participants will get their first look at fourth quarter US GDP figures. The annualized growth rate is expected to have slowed to 2.2 percent in the final three months of the year, down from 3.5 percent in the preceding period. Robust improvement in US data outcomes relative to consensus forecasts over the same period suggests analysts may be underestimating the economy’s vigor, opening the door for an upside surprise.
Under normal circumstances, such a result might’ve encouraged bets on a more hawkish Fed and sent the US currency upward. It seems unlikely that the central bank will do anything but wait until there is greater clarity about where the White House is steering however. Indeed, FOMC policymakers including Chair Yellen have consistently stressed that much for their outlook depends on the impact of whatever fiscal program Mr Trump pursues. This may mean that the GDP release loses much of its market-moving might.
This makes the US unit vulnerable to kneejerk volatility as markets jump from one headline to the next, attempting to divine direction. If price action so far this year is telling, investors faced with such a backdrop prefer to scale back exposure and wait for greater clarity from the sidelines before committing one way or another. With net speculative long USD exposure still at the highest in over a year (according to CFTC data), ample room for profit-taking remains. This hints that the path of least resistance leads downward.
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