Unless you’ve been stuck under a rock or at the beach all summer, this is old news. And we’ve admittedly been a bit obnoxious when it comes to rehashing this theme. But usually when we find ourselves harping on something, it's because it's a big deal.
Our own behavior can be fantastic information, and it's become a part of our process to pay special attention whenever we begin to repeat ourselves a lot.
This week is no different, as the US Dollar Index $DXY provides another example of the market’s sloppy state of affairs.
Just when we thought we might finally have some decisive price action in the Dollar, Friday’s attempted breakout followed by Monday’s weakness is casting some serious doubts.
Was last week’s breakout above the March pivot highs valid?
Or was it just another failed move to add to the market’s growing list of whipsaws and fake-outs?
Where the USD heads next will have wide-ranging implications across asset classes by either providing a tailwind for risk assets or a headwind in the case it resolves higher from its year-to-date range.
But, as the market continues to chop sideways, we want to direct our attention to one of the most important risk gauges in the currency market.
That’s the Aussie-Yen.
In this week’s post, let’s check in on the AUD/JPY to see what information we can glean regarding risk appetite and what it could mean for other markets.
From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @Ianculley
The US Dollar Index $DXY has been a good reminder that price doesn’t always move in a straight line.
Paul Tudor Jones has been quoted saying “markets only trend about 15% of the time.” The textbooks will tell you it’s somewhere between 20% and 30%. But it all comes down to how you’re measuring it.
We think it’s fair to say most markets trend about 25% of the time on a structural basis.
And the present year two market conditions have been a great illustration of what they look like the other 75% of the time… range-bound... sideways... a hot mess.
Speaking of which, last week, we pointed out that Dollar strength had stalled and that things were beginning to look messy on shorter time frames.
A little more than a month ago, we began to see broad-based strength in USD emerge on both a short and intermediate-term basis.
Since then, it’s been the central theme in currency markets.
But we're starting to see signs that this near-term US dollar dominance could be fading as bulls have had ample opportunity to push the USD higher in recent months but have made little progress.
The lack of follow-through can be seen in our long USD trade ideas from late June, as most are not working. We recently saw many crosses reach our risk level, but price rebounded instead of triggering an entry. The EUR/USD is a great example of this.
From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @Ianculley
What started out as a tactical bounce in the US Dollar could be turning into a full-fledged reversal of the primary trend.
Defensive assets such as US Treasury bonds and the Japanese yen are catching a bid. On the other hand, risk assets continue to struggle at overhead supply. Many are experiencing significant selling pressure at these logical levels.
With each passing day, the choppy environment that’s been in place since early February is becoming increasingly messy.
This is a perfect environment for the US dollar to thrive as more and more investors are hiding out in safe-haven assets and waiting for the smoke to clear.
Consider all this defensive posturing within the context of the choppy year-two environment we're in, and it appears investors are really beginning to seek shelter from the storm.
And what’s one of the most popular safe-haven assets?
The market environment directed our focal point toward the Dollar. And now that it appears risk is coming off the table, we’re shifting our focus to the Yen.
Usually, when we talk about risk-on/risk-off behavior and the Yen, the AUD/JPY is at the center.
From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @Ianculley
We’ve been pounding the table about the broad-based strength from the US Dollar since earlier this month. Due to the momentum of its recent move, we believe this rally could have legs beyond just the near-term... But we'll address that when the time comes.
Though the Dollar gave some of this month's gains back last week, our short-term outlook remains higher. As I write this, many G-10 currencies like the Euro, Pound, Aussie, and Canadian Dollar are all rolling over relative to USD.
We’ll be revisiting this theme plenty as it plays out over the coming weeks to months.
But in the meantime let’s focus on a currency pair that’s bucking the trend, the US Dollar-Brazilian Real $USD/$BRL.
And the market quickly answered with a resounding, YES!
We’ve highlighted several currency pairs challenging crucial levels of support and resistance. Last week, we saw the USD take control at those key levels.
Both the EUR/USD and GBP/USD turned away from critical areas of former support turned resistance. The USD/CAD moved sharply higher from a major area of support. The AUD/USD broke back below a key retracement level after consolidating for the first half of the year. And the NZD/USD retreated from an area of overwhelming overhead supply.
From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @Ianculley
The US Dollar trading at key levels against a significant amount of Developed and Emerging Market currencies is the major theme in Currency Markets right now.
The GBP/USD is challenging an area of resistance that acted as support for over two decades but has been a barrier for prices since the Brexit vote almost 5 years ago.
The USD/CHF is on the verge of completing a massive 9-year top.
The USD/ZAR just violated critical support at a decade-long trend line.
And USD/CAD is currently attempting to complete a 5-year double top... with a pattern that looks strikingly similar to that of the DXY Index itself.
Back then, we were already leaning toward "NO." Fast forward to today, and it's more like a "NO WAY."
The reason for this is simple. In that post, we explained the line in the sand for our USD/BRICS Index was ~19.
In the few weeks since, this critical level has been violated. The market has spoken, and it's saying we're in for a lower US Dollar relative to BRIC-country currencies.