Tuesday, June 30, 2009

06/30 - Dollar ends the quarter on a high note



The US Dollar Index ends a brutal second quarter on a bright note. The main perpretrator was the British Pound and it's volatile reaction to economic data, which triggered a false-break of a 4-week wedge formation. This highlighted the EUR/USD's inability to clear the 1.4137 pivot and allowed the Greenback to maintain support at a key fibonacci retracement at 79.47. The weaker consumer confidence number in North American trade spurred renewed risk aversion causing commodities, equities and foreign currencies to retreat even further. The 80.52/64 (DXY) and 1.3980/90 (EUR/USD) regions have become the next focal points (where key trendlines and 10/20-day MA's reside). If these levels are maintained, then attention remains squarely on 1.4137 & 79.47. A sustained clearance, however, will refocus former fibonacci pivots at 80.864/ 1.3839 and signals a possible medium-term bottom in the dollar.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

06/23 - EUR/USD, DXY rip through the 20-day MA


A confluence of technical and fundamental factors have contributed to Tuesday's decline in the US Dollar Index. Risk aversion began to ease the moment Asian equity markets closed, as downward pressure on equity futures subsided. News that a rating agency could potentially downgrade Uncle Sam's AAA rating if the U.S were to lose it's global reserve status, contributed to the first bout of dollar weakness. As a result, several leading indicators of risk appetite failed at key technical levels. Gold rebounded off a key fibonacci retracement (61.8% of the October low to the February high) and the USD/CAD rejected at the 50-day MA. The EUR/USD & DXY breached their 20-day MA's later in North American trade when ECB Weber's comments squashed any thoughts of additional quantitative easing. Since the past two FOMC's have ignited dollar sell-offs, it is not suprising that foreign currencies have been bid up going into tomorrow's meeting. While a "buy the rumor, sell the fact" scenario could be setting up, if the Fed were to dissappoint the market, there is a substantial chance that risk aversion could re-emerge. In either event, the dollar would clearly benefit. In the meantime, clearing key retracement zones at 1.4110 (EUR/USD's 61.8% retracement) & 79.83 (DXY's 50% retracement) will probably remain tough obstacles, but if cleared then focus shifts to the recent extremes seen at the beginning of June. Only a loss of the EUR/USD's 20-day MA near 1.40 (above 80 for DXY) will shift focus back towards trendline support (now located below 1.39).


Monday, June 22, 2009

06/22 - 20-day MA's hold up, Oil/Gold lose support



The US Dollar Index has benefitted from a loss of trendline support with both spot Gold and Crude Oil. Friday's rejection at the 20-day MA highlighted a failure at key psychological levels for the DXY (80) & EUR/USD (1.40) and has triggered a deeper pullback in risk appetite. Further weakness in equities and interest rates should help buoy the Greenback towards it's 35-day exponential moving average in the mid 81 region and allow the EUR/USD to retest the key 1.38 pivot, then possibly the 50-day MA further out. If the current move stalls, the 20-day MA becomes the proverbial line in the sand (now located at 80 & 1.40).
[STRATEGY] BUY USD's (SELL EUR/USD)

Friday, June 19, 2009

06/19 - DXY & EUR/USD Pressuring key trendlines


The US Dollar's recovery is beginning to stall as key market forces such as interest rates, commodities and equities have all seemed to have temporarily based since failing to extend recent losses. Despite Thursday's succesful defense of the 20-day MA and key psychological levels such as the 80 handle (DXY) & 1.40 (EUR/USD), key trendlines remain under pressure. A clean break of 80 & 1.40 will refocus last week's swing pivots (79.40 & 1.4137). A false-break, however, will refocus the 35-day exponential moving average (DXY) and the head & shoulders neckline at 1.3813 (EUR/USD).

Friday, June 12, 2009

06/12 - Pressuring the 20-day MA again



The US Dollar Index recovered off last week's short-term double bottom but has paused at the 20-day MA over the past few days. The ensuing pullback stalled at a key fibonacci retracement (61.8% of 77.94-81.36) and EUR/USD's former head & shoulder's neckline has reverted to resistance. An early indication of possible risk aversion was Thursday's reversal in treasury prices and subsequent bearish close in equities. Moreover, Gold's inability to reclaim key resistance and weakness in the Canadian Dollar (key leading indicators) have enabled the Greenback to pressure the 20-day MA at 80.25 once again. Sustained EUR/USD weakness below 1.3978 (20-day MA) would highlight a larger head & shoulders pattern and will immediately target the 1.3800 neckline.
LOOK TO SELL EUR/USD

Thursday, June 4, 2009

06/04 - LOOK TO SELL EUR/USD



The US Dollar Index confirmed a short-term double bottom on Wednesday and flirted with the 10-day MA before pulling back, marking the third failure at this key "fast" moving average. Generally the fourth test carries a strong probability of clearing. Meanwhile, the EUR/USD has confirmed a Head & Shoulders top by briefy probing below the neckline at 1.4115. While these patterns represent stabilization, overstretched daily studies and MACD divergence should provide support for a reversal in trend. Risk appetite remains strong, however, with the S&P 500 finding support at the 200-day MA, Crude Oil at fresh highs and Gold maintaining it's bullish structure with former resistance at 960 reverting to support.
As bearish sentiment towards the dollar continues, it is no suprise that this rebound has met a fair amount of resistance. Thus, positioning for dollar strength should be done conservatively.
There are two entry zones depending on the speed of the latest move. If the dollar quickly loses current corrective trendline support at 79.15 (or if EUR/USD swiftly clears corrective trendline resistance at 1.4215) , then the entry zone is between the 78.6 to 112.5% retracement of the latest correction. If consolidation ensues then the entry zone is between the 61.8 & 78.6% retracement. In either event, clearing the 10-day MA is the confirmation and in itself can be used as a more conservative entry point. If the 10-day MA is not breached, then the next targeted region is 77.86 for the DXY (US Dollar Index) where the December low and a key fibonacci retracement lie.
[STRATEGY] BUY USD's (SELL EUR/USD)