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The US Dollar (USD) trades in the green on Tuesday in an attempt to recoup Monday’s losses. The Greenback is rallying supported by substantial safe-haven inflows as most major equity markets are in the red. The move sparked during the Asian trading session, with the Indian Nifty index falling over 5%, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s victory appears to be narrower than what polls were predicting. On the economic front, all eyes are on some important indicators that could further confirm the slightly downbeat sentiment surrounding the US economy. The main event will be the US JOLTS Job Openings report for April. Although this is a lagging number, job openings have been decreasing for several months in a row and a further decline could further confirm the end of that US exceptionalism.
Daily digest market movers: JOLTS as appetiser
- Job Openings in April are expected to fall further to 8.34 million from 8.488 million a month earlier.
- Factory Orders for April are expected to increase 0.6% in April, slowing from the 1.6% rise seen in March.
US Dollar Index Technical Analysis: Up for the wrong reasonsThe US Dollar Index (DXY) is seeing Dollar bulls fighting with knives between their teeth. The DXY might be popping back up above 104.00 this Tuesday, but this would happen for all the wrong reasons. Simply because equities are heading lower, the US Dollar is seeing some safe-haven flows. The recent appreciation should not be seen in correlation with the recent softening in the US economy, which could still bring more easing in the Greenback over the coming weeks and months. On the upside, the DXY first faces the double belt of resistance in the form of the 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at 104.43 and the 100-day SMA at 104.42. Next up, the pivotal level near 104.60 comes into play. Topside for now is forming around 105.00, with the 55-day SMA at 105.00 and the peak from recent weeks at 105.12.On the downside, the Greenback is trading in that air pocket area in which the 104.00 big figure looks to be holding. Once through there, another decline to first 103.50 and even 103.00 are the levels to watch. With the Relative Strength Index (RSI) still not trading in the oversold level, more downside room is still under consideration. More By This Author:Oil Trades Near Last Line Of Support Before Substantial Correction US Dollar trades flat with TIPP economic optimism retreatingUSD/JPY Extends Losses For Third Consecutive Session Towards Crucial Support