The Dollar Rebounded On Retail Sales Release While Wall Street Haunted By

 | Dec 15, 2017 03:12AM ET

Summary:

1.The dollar rebounded in the short term following U.S. retail sales release for November which increased 0.8% MoM, higher than the consensus forecast of 0.3%.

2.As one of the biggest victims of a cloud of suspicion over tax reform in U.S., Wall Street declined as the three major indices turned lower after opening higher, with grim short-term prospect.

The dollar rebounded on Thursday 14 December following U.S. retail sales release for November which grew by 0.8% MoM, higher than the consensus forecast of 0.3%. In addition, the three major central banks including ECB, BOE and SNB, all decided to leave their interest rates unchanged. However, the dollar gave up some of gains while U.S. equities bore the brunt of a cloud of suspicion concerning to tax reform as the three major indices turned lower after opening higher, with gloomy short-term prospect. It was reported that two congressmen disagreed with the tax reform bill.

Technical

The dollar index (DXY) staged a corrective rally. Having converged, its short term moving averages tended to overlap with its long term moving averages which contracted further to flatten on the 4 hour chart. Lack of more positive news from tax reform, the index could potentially turn lower again on the day.