Dollar Sees Gains Against Counterparts Following Significant Demand

 | Jul 30, 2014 05:47AM ET

h3 Big day ahead of us

Fixed income markets were in the forefront yesterday as yields in several European countries – Germany, France, Spain and Italy – hit record lows. US Treasury yields got dragged down with them. Yet the dollar managed to gain against most G10 and EM currencies as well, with significant demand from both companies and trend-following hedge funds. The EUR/USD hit a new low for the year as US consumer confidence rose sharply with employment measures improving. The stronger dollar prevented gold from breaking through its 200-day moving average and the metal moved lower despite rising tensions in Ukraine, which indicates weak underlying demand for gold. Today’s economic events seem likely to keep the dollar well bid, while the technicals largely reinforce that view (see below).

Japanese industrial production collapsed in June, dropping 3.3% mom as companies cut back production in response to the drop in consumer spending after the rise in the consumption tax. Nor are exports picking up the slack. The figures, which were the worst since the 2011 tsunami, were in sharp contrast to neighboring South Korea, where IP was up 2.9% mom in June. This poor performance calls into question the Bank of Japan’s inflation target and simply reaffirms my view that the BoJ will have to take further action to weaken the yen later this year. The news had no immediate impact on the USD/JPY but over the longer term should keep the pair moving higher. I remain bearish JPY.

Today’s action: During the European day, the preliminary German CPI for July is expected to have fallen to 0.8% yoy, down slightly from 1.0% yoy in June. As usual the drama will start several hours earlier when the CPI for Saxony is released ahead of the country’s headline CPI. I don’t think a decline in German inflation would increase the likelihood of any new measures at next week’s ECB meeting, because the ECB probably wants to have time to gauge the impact of its already-announced measures before taking new steps. Nonetheless a further decline in inflation on top of last week’s poor German Ifo readings would probably raise questions about the underlying health of the Eurozone’s strongest economy and add to the sense that the bloc’s only hope is a weaker currency. I remain bearish on EUR.