Currencies Have A History Of Thanksgiving Milestones

 | Nov 19, 2018 04:34PM ET

Daily FX Market Roundup 11.19.18

By Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management.

It is a holiday week in the United States but Monday’s moves in forex shows how important it is to not mistake less participation with consolidation. The U.S. dollar fell to fresh lows against the euro, Swiss franc and Japanese yen as stocks resumed their slide. The forex market will trade continuously but equity and bond markets in the U.S. will be closed on Thursday with half days for both on Friday. Currencies actually have a history of breaking out or reaching new milestones the week of Thanksgiving. Just take a look at the charts below.

Last year, EUR/USD and GBP/USD hit a 1-month high Thanksgiving day while USD/JPY fell to a 2-month low the day before Thanksgiving. In 2016, the EUR/USD dropped to an 11-month low the week of Thanksgiving while USD/JPY rose to a 7-month high. There was no meaningful movement in sterling that year. In 2015, EUR/USD and GBP/USD fell to a 7-month low the week of Thanksgiving as USD/JPY consolidated. In most cases, the trend that was in place immediately before the holidays continued. All of this implies that if the trend of continuation persists this year, we should see EUR/USD test and possibly break 1.15 and USD/JPY hit 112 this week.

Fundamentally, there’s not much on the US calendar this week and it seems like any weakness in second-tier reports is being used as an excuse to continue selling dollars. On Monday, the NAHB Housing Market Index failed to rebound like economists anticipated and this was enough to send the dollar spiraling lower. With the momentum skewed to the downside, investors completely ignored Fed President and FOMC voter Williams’ positive outlook – he described the economy as doing very well with solid job growth. Tuesday’s housing starts and building permits reports are not expected to alter the dollar’s trend.