December Brings The Volatility

 | Dec 02, 2019 02:45PM ET

Welcome to December! As my colleague Ken Odeluga wrote in our Market Brief, the week started off pretty well with both the official Chinese PMI (released Saturday) and China’s unofficial measure of manufacturing, the Caixin PMI, both beat expectations. With that, stock indices, the Australian dollar and the New Zealand dollar were all trading higher on Monday. Then early in the U.S. session, Trump tweeted that tariffs would be restored on steel and aluminum shipped from Brazil and Argentina to the U.S. Stocks and the U.S. dollar both began to sell off. However, the selling did not start in earnest until the U.S. ISM Manufacturing PMI for November was released at 48.1 vs 49.2 expected and 48.3 last. A reading above 50 indicates economic expansion and a reading under 50 indicates economic contraction. November is now the fourth straight month of a reading under 50 and, therefore, economic contraction.

The U.S. dollar Index has had a difficult time trading about the 50% retracement level from the highs on October 1 to the lows on November 1. The DXY has been trading near the 98.40 level for a week and could not get a significant move above it. With Monday’s price action, USD moved aggressively lower and is now trading back at support between the 97.85/98.00 area. If price breaks lower through this level, 97.65 may be the next level of support.