Bearish USD As Commodity Rally Continues, Yields Drift Higher

 | May 04, 2016 03:20AM ET

After treading water through much of April, the US dollar index took another step lower last week, after the BOJ declined to fire another salvo of stimulus at the markets – rocketing the yen higher by over 5 percent for the week. Taking their cue from the currency markets, hard commodities also rallied sharply to new highs for the year, with gold, silver and oil each tacking on ~ 5 percent for the week.

Doing what they do best, markets successfully cut against the grain of the now apparent consensus expectation that the reflationary rally was due for a pause. Nonetheless, the rising tide that had lifted most boats since mid February did begin to recede, namely, in the equity markets which enjoyed a wider breadth of performance since the commodity markets found what we believe was a cyclical low.

h3 US Dollar/h3

While we remain steadfast, long-term bears on the dollar and believe the majority of the move over the past two years will eventually get unwound, over the short-term we're more inclined to speculate the recent leg lower in the dollar index over the past week will be retraced, with the yen appearing most vulnerable to newfound dollar strength. That said, keep in mind the bigger picture headwinds working on the dollar both at home and abroad, that remain long-term bearish—in our opinion.

Considering the recent move lower, we have adjusted our outlook for a more moderate retracement target in the US dollar index back to ~ 94.50.