Impulse Moves In The Currencies

 | Aug 14, 2018 02:22AM ET

For the last several months or so I’ve been showing you that many of the important currencies that make up the US dollar have been breaking down from large 2 1/2 year trading ranges. If you want to know what the US dollar is going to do the first thing you need to do is look at the important currencies that make up the US dollar as the US dollar is just a derivative of those currencies. Most of the time a stock, or in this case the currencies that make up the US dollar are trading within a reversal pattern, consolidation pattern, or are in an impulse move. It’s that impulse move that you want to be aware of and the earlier the better.

Tonight I’m going to update most of the currencies we’ve been following over the last several months because I believe they’re in the process of beginning an important impulse leg down which can have a profound affect on the PM complex and commodities in general. These types of moves don’t come around all that often, but when you begin to see an important setup maturing it’s usually worth the risk to try and take advantage of what the market will give you and impulse moves are what I live for as an intermediate term trader.

I’m not going to go into a lot of detail as we’ve been following these different currencies pretty closely for the last two or three months. It’s important to understand that most of the currencies we are going to look at have been in a bear market since the 2011 H&S top in most cases. From the initial breakdown below their respective necklines their impulse move really got underway even though it actually started at the previous high, which was the top of the right shoulder.

Lets start with the CADr, which formed a massive H&S top in 2011 with the first impulse leg down starting at the right shoulder high. Confirmation of that impulse leg is when the price action broke below the neckline. Like with so many things related to the currencies, PM complex and commodities in general, 2016 marked an important low which finished up a very large impulse move down. As you can see it has taken the CAD dollar 2 1/2 years to consolidate that massive leg down. For the last several months the price action has been in breakout and backtesting mode to the bottom rail of that 2 1/2 year bearish rising wedge which I’m labelling as a halfway pattern. Also keep in mind that Canada is a natural resource country.