USD Tags Fresh 2018 High On Mixed Economic Data

 | Dec 14, 2018 02:38PM ET

Generally speaking, US traders have been focused on the other side of the Atlantic this week, with particular attention on the continued Brexit drama and the mostly as-expected ECB meeting. With those situations (at least temporarily) behind us, the market’s eye has shifted back stateside in advance of next week’s highly anticipated Federal Reserve meeting.

A series of economic reports on Friday may prompt Fed policymakers to raise their eyebrows, though it’s a bit late in the game to deviate from next week’s (assumed) interest-rate increase. November’s Retail Sales report printed at +0.2% m/m, a tick above the market’s expected +0.1% reading. Bolstering the strength of the report, sales in the its “control group” (a cohort seen as more representative of underlying consumer demand) rose +0.9% m/m, more than twice the median economists’ estimate. In a separate report, Industrial Production rose +0.6% m/m vs. +0.3% eyed, though the previous month’s report was revised lower.

While retail sales and industrial production were both solid, the forward-looking Markit PMI readings for December were more concerning. Both the manufacturing and services PMI figures came in lower than expected, as well as lower than last months’ readings. Overall, the composite Markit PMI reading printed at 53.6, the lowest level of economic activity since May 2017. In the words of IHS Markit’s Chief economist Chris Williamson:

The flash PMIs bring signs of the US economy ending 2018 on a softer note. With business activity expanding at the slowest rate for one and a half years, the surveys indicate that the pace of economic growth has faded to 2.0% in December albeit closer to 2.5% for the fourth quarter as a whole…amid uncertainty about the economic outlook, linked in part to growing geopolitical concerns and trade wars.

h3 US Dollar Index Technicals/h3

Friday's hour-by-hour price action in the greenback reflects traders’ evolving views on the US economy. After the better-than-expected Retail Sales and Industrial Production reports, the US Dollar Index peeked out to a fresh 2018 high above 97.70. However the progress was short-lived, with the disappointing Markit PMI readings taking rates back down to the mid-97.00s.