Charts Suggest Scope For One More Dollar Push Lower Before Full Correction

 | Nov 04, 2019 12:46AM ET

The U.S. dollar traded heavily last week, falling against all the major currencies but the Canadian dollar. The Bank of Canada softened its neutral stance a few hours before the Federal Reserve signaled a pause after delivering its third rate cut to complete its midcourse correction.

The Federal Reserve's real broad trade-weighted dollar index, which arguably is the single best measure when considering the economic impact of changes in foreign exchange prices, eased in October by a little more than 0.5%. With two months left in the year, it is up by a little less than a quarter of one percent here in 2019. This index has risen in only three months this year thus far after falling in three months all of last year.

The move against the U.S. dollar was led by those currencies that one often associates with robust risk appetites, namely the Antipodean and Scandinavian currencies. They all appreciated by more than 1%. The dollar fell against most emerging market currencies, though the South African rand (-2.3%), the Chilean peso (-1.7%), and the Mexican peso (-0.3) were notable exceptions. The dollar fell 0.4% against the Chinese yuan. It was the fourth consecutive weekly decline. Ahead of the weekend, the PBOC leaned against further yuan appreciation.

Dollar Index: The Dollar Index was turned back from 98.00 after the FOMC meeting and spent the last two sessions below the 200-day moving average, a little under 97.50. It entered a band of support seen 97.00-97.15. Below there, another range houses several technical levels between 96.50 and 96.80. Given the MACDs and Slow Stochastics, we see scope for another modest leg lower before corrective pressures likely emerge.

Euro: The stronger than expected Q3 U.S. GDP, the Fed's confirmation that it is on hold, and a better than expected U.S. employment report failed to mark the end of the euro's recovery. The euro rose every session last week for the first time in two years but was unable to overcome the October 21 high near $1.1180. The 200-day moving average is a little below $1.1200. The (61.8%) retracement of the decline since the late June high a little above $1.1400 is found a little above near $1.1210. The MACD is extended, but the Slow Stochastic gives room for another push higher. We expect the next leg up will complete a phase before a downside correction of a move that began in early October around $1.0880. A break of $1.1130 would suggest a near-term high is in place.

Yen: The dollar reversed lower versus the yen after the FOMC meeting near three-month highs near JPY109.30 and proceeded to drop to a bit through JPY108.00 to three-week lows before the weekend. It found support near the trendline drawn off the August and October lows and the (50%) retracement of the October rally. The MACDs and Slow Stochastics suggest the dollar's downside correction may have just begun. A break of JPY107.50 could signal another big figure decline. The JPY108.40-JPY108.60 may offer initial resistance.

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Sterling: With the government finally able to push through a snap election, sterling found support near $1.28 and recovered to the $1.2970 area. It was stopped shy of the $1.30 level and the nearly $1.3015 high on October 21. The momentum is sufficient to carry it to new highs, which we think will complete the advance before a correction ensues. As part of a larger dollar decline, there may be potential toward $1.3100-$1.3140.

Canadian Dollar: The U.S. dollar posted a key upside reversal last week against the Canadian dollar by trading on both sides of the previous week's range and closing above last week's high. The surprising shift in the Bank of Canada's stance, opening the door to a possible rate cut in the coming months, spurred the Canadian dollar sales as important technical resistance had been approached. Canada's two-year yield tumbled nearly 16 basis points to 1.55%. The greenback's downside momentum has been waning near CAD1.3050, and we had cautioned that the risk-reward did not seem to justify chasing it lower, and the U.S. dollar posted a key reversal on the daily bar charts the day before the Bank of Canada met. The surge carried it a little above CAD1.3200 and the (50%) retracement of the decline since early October push toward CAD1.3350 that came in near CAD1.3195. The MACDs and Slow Stochastics warn that the U.S. dollar's correction may have just begun. The next retracement objective is near CAD1.3230, and the 200-day moving average is near CAD1.3275. However, of the November 8 employment data, the U.S. dollar could drift back toward CAD1.3100 as the market has not been convinced that a rate cut will be delivered before late Q1 20.