Dollar In Vogue Trading Dominates

 | May 26, 2015 07:21AM ET

This morning after a long-three day weekend, market participants jump straight back into the fray to find the US dollar has built strongly on the gains seen after last Friday’s upside U.S CPI surprise, and comments from Fed Chair Yellen that a rate hike remains on the cards for this year.

In Europe, dealers return to the grindstone where the Greek debt dance has Euro capital markets very much starting this shortened trading week on the back foot. The single unit trades at new one-month lows outright (€1.0890), while German and UK debt rallies on Greek risk aversion trading and on the surprise weekend Spanish vote results. Spanish yields have backed up after a negative reaction to the region polls in Spain where a strong showing for the opposition antiausterity parties (Podemos) is a clear threat to the incumbent government and to the euro periphery stability.

Market worries that Greece will be incapable of fulfilling its debt obligations to the IMF next week will only continue to weigh on the EUR in the short term, while U.S bond yields will favor the dollar against a host of G10 currencies. Yen trades at an eight-year low (¥122.79). It seems that the recent stability in the pair over the past few months had greatly reduce speculative yen shorts – the market wants to play catch up to the potential upside momentum due to U.S and Japanese interest rate differentials.

Investors are looking ahead to this morning’s U.S data menu (durable goods and new home sales) for key touch point guidance. Both reports are expected to show improvement over the previous months readings, which would only add value to the dominant current trading strategies. The market is most interested in the U.S housing data points – was last week’s surge in starts and permits a coincidence or not for the housing sector?