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Trump's Comments Continue To Pressure The US Dollar

Published 22/08/2018, 09:35 am
Updated 06/07/2021, 05:05 pm

Originally published by AxiTrader

Market Summary (7.42am Wednesday August 22)

President Trump’s comments on the Fed and currencies continued to reverberate through G10 forex markets last night. Traders are again focused on the battle that is likely to be fought as the fed continues to raise rates over the coming year, but they also wonder what the President might do or say about that and the Greenback.

That he’s theoretically got no way to remove the Fed chair or influence policy outside his bully pulpit hasn’t stopped US dollar bears taking up the cudgel.

So this morning the US Dollar Index is down 0.66% at 92.26 while the euro, fresh from a stop run through 1.15 in our timezone yesterday fell back below that level before a surge saw it trade to a high of 1.1600. It’s back at 1.1569 now – up 0.8%. USD/JPY is at 110.40 for a 0.3% gain. It seems to be lagging because risk appetite is ebullient.

In many ways the most remarkable performance is of the pound which rose 0.8%, in step with the euro. But what’s remarkable about that is there are more and more signs a hard Brexit is coming. The EU negotiator Barnier essentially said if the UK wants a deal they have to abide by EU rules – sounds like Brexit in name only and hard to get through the UK Parliament surely.

Of the commodity bloc the kiwi made up for lost time with a 0.8% gain after trailing badly the previous day. It’s at 0.6691. The Canadian dollar is largely unchanged with USD/CAD at 1.3036 while the Aussie dollar's lock step move with the euro has lost some of its tightness. In no small part that’s probably because yesterday’s leadership vote seems to have settled nothing for the rabble currently running the country. AUD/USD is still up 0.34% though at 0.7365 off a high of 0.7381 overnight.

Emerging market currencies continue their rolling crisis. I’ll say rolling rather than contagion because it doesn’t look or feel like that. The Brazilian real was in the firing line last night and has lost 1.73% against the US dollar with USD/BRL at 4.0371. USD/TRY is largely unchanged at 6.07, while the Greenback has lost one per cent against the South African rand and 0.6% against the Mexican peso. Of EM Asia it’s fairly quiet save for the baht, which gained 0.88% on the buck.

To stocks then and the S&P 500 set a new record high of 2,873.23 overnight – on the day it equalled the record days in a bull run. But it couldn’t hold that high and closed at 2,863 up 0.2% and the second highest close on record. The Dow was 0.25% higher at 25,822 while the Nasdaq 100 gained 0.35%. Worth noting the Russell 2000 was 1.14% higher at 1718 – it’s own fresh record close.

BREAKING THOUGH: US stock futures are lower after news broke that former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen has done a deal including admitting to violating campaign rules at the direction of the candidate.

Europe was a little mixed. The continent did okay with the DAX up 0.43% and the CAC 0.54% higher. But the FTSE100 in London dipped 0.34%. Chinese stocks had a solid day yesterday and the yuan has a bit of a bid. SO for the moment things have settled.

Which brings me to the absolutely appalling performance of the ASX yesterday. It’s not that the 61 point fall was unexpected. I suggested a retest of the break in my Australia today note yesterday. It’s just the selling was so aggressive and came much faster than expected. That’s what uncertainty of political leadership and the impact that will have on business and consumers can do to sentiment. Overnight though even a new record for the S&P 500 couldn’t perk up the spirits of the bulls. The SPI is down 19 points as I write. Politics here and in the US hey, :S.

Oil was higher again as prices respect support and the Iran issue continues to occupy traders minds. We’ve just seen a much larger than expected draw on the API inventory data this morning so we’ll see what that does. In the meantime, WTI is up 1.34% on the front contract – far less on the second – while Brent is 0.4% higher at $72.50. Gold is at $1194 up 0.36% while copper gained another 0.69% as the recovery continues. Recessionistas? Buelah, Buelah?

Speaking of which the US 2-10 curve is around 23 points with the 2's at 2.61 and the 10's at 2.84. Robert Kaplan, Dallas Fed president, said last night the Fed has 3-4 more hikes to get to neutral before he sees a pause. FWIW I agree.

Bitcoin is largely unchanged at $6,430.

On the day we get retail sales in New Zealand which might be interesting for kiwi traders and then we the Westpac leading index and construction work done here in Australia along with a speech from Guy Debelle, RBA deputy-governor, on low inflation!!!! That’s at 1.10pm AEST. Retails sales are out in Canada and them its existing home sales in the US, EIA crude data, and then the FOMC minutes are released at 4am my time tomorrow morning

Macro Stuff that affects everyone and everything – either today or eventually

International

  • The S&P celebrated an equal with the longest bull market in history overnight. But the news that Michael Cohen, President Trump’s former lawyer, has pleaded guilty to a number of charges has hurt futures in after hours action. That this was rumoured helped knock the S&P from the highs but we now hear that the President appears to be implicated in violating campaign law.
  • Bloomberg reports, “In acknowledging the charges against him, Cohen said he was directed to violate campaign law at the direction of a candidate for federal office. At the same candidate’s direction, he said he paid $130,000 to somebody to keep them quiet, which was later repaid by the candidate. He didn’t identify the candidate or the person who was paid, but those facts match Cohen’s payment to Clifford and Trump’s repayment”.
  • Does this change the metrics for impeachment? Probably note. The Democrats still have to win both the House and the Senate in the upcoming election in November to have a chance of that. And while they may take the House the metrics in the Senate look more difficult. But November is now a very live election.
  • That could weigh on stocks sentiment. I’m not sure to be frank whether this is just another one of these after hours funks or whether having touch the top of the cliff with a new high stocks now want to reverse lower. Perhaps though we might head back toward very important support around 2,795.
  • That last night’s high was almost the perfect fulfillment of the 138.2% projection from the break supports that notion. Here’s the chart of our futures based CFD.

Chart

  • Sorry President Trump, the Fed is charting it’s own course. That’s the clear message I expect to get from Fed chair Powell at Jackson Hole this week and it’s the message that Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan gave last night. Reuters reports that in an essay published by his bank Kaplan said, “it would take approximately three or four more federal funds rate increases of a quarter of a percent to get into the range of this estimated neutral level…At that point, I would be inclined to step back and assess the outlook for the economy and look at a range of other factors - including the levels and shape of the Treasury yield curve - before deciding what further actions, if any, might be appropriate.”
  • China responded to President Trump’s accusation of manipulating their currency yesterday by saying that the yuan’s rate is set by the market and that are not using it as a trade tool. We also heard from the authorities that stimulus will remain in place but not be overly excessive.
  • Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) has called out Russia for hacking overnight in the run up to the November election. The US has taken this seriously telling the Russians to back off and imposing new sanctions.
  • Mexico and the US seem to be moving closer to a NAFTA deal, so much so it appears it’s almost time to invite the Canadians back to the table Reuters reported overnight.
  • Brexit negotiations are now “ongoing”. Both sides are still miles apart in terms of expectations it seems to me. The EU wants the UK to stay and so to get a deal they effectively have to agree to all the old terms without any power while the UK wants its cake and eat it too. A hard Brexit looms, unfortunately. Indeed the Irish Times reported that British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said the UK has faced “bigger challenges” than Brexit in the past and will “survive” the process. Hunt also told the BBC that the chance of no deal was “not negligible”.

Have a great day's trading.

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