Dollar On The Defense After More Bad News

 | Aug 16, 2016 04:50AM ET

Tuesday August 16: Five things the markets are talking about

The ‘big dollar’s demise over the past few trading sessions is being driven by mixed U.S data and fixed incomes’ repricing of the U.S yield curve.

The first regional Fed factory report for the month yesterday did not bode well for U.S manufacturing (dropped sharply to -4.2 from +0.55). Despite conditions stateside having improved in recent months, U.S producers continue to battle with softer overseas demand, worsened by the strong dollar’s effect on pricing, and with a sharp drop off in business investment.

Investors continue to look for direction in thin holiday trading conditions and the reason why some of the current price moves remain so highly exaggerated – overnight yen action is a good example.

Today promises to be a tad busier with the U.S releasing Building Permits and consumer inflation reports at 08:30 EDT.

1. Oil prices see profit taking, gold looks for direction

It’s not a surprise to see crude prices temporarily back away from their five-week highs overnight, especially in thin trading conditions. This month’s +16% rally seems to be a strong enough incentive to book some profit (yesterday oil rallied +3.2% intraday).

International Brent crude oil futures were trading at $48.14, down -21 cents from their previous close. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was trading at $45.56 a barrel, down -18 cents from its previous close.

This August rally is been driven by producer talk of reining in the global oversupply as investors speculate that OPEC will discuss a potential cap on production at an upcoming meeting next month. With the Saudi’s leading the drive and the fact that even Russia has voiced their willing to discuss continues to provide crude support, and this despite questionable global fundamentals.

Also, news of an imminent collapse in oil output from Venezuela is also supporting prices – they hold the world’s largest crude oil reserves and are on track to suffer its steepest annual oil output drop in over a dozen years.

Gold rose for a second day overnight ($1,348.31 or +0.3%) as the dollar slipped on lower expectations of Fed rate hike this year. From a technical perspective, the gold market remains in the ‘balance’ as investors wait for more economic data to determine the “next” trend. Perhaps tomorrow’s FOMC minutes will be the instigator.