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The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the performance of the US Dollar against six different major currencies, trades slightly below 108.00 at the time of writing and is up over 0.50%. The Nvidia rout from Monday, where Nvidia (NVDA) lost over $600 billion in market capitalization at one point, played into US President Donald Trump’s hand regarding his plan to impose a universal tariff. Markets even got more shaken up when t Trump advocated for a gradually increasing universal tariff plan, bigger than 2.5%. On the economic data front, all eyes are on the US Federal Reserve (Fed) and the European Central Bank (ECB), which will announce their first monetary policy decisions this year on Wednesday and Thursday, respectively. Ahead of those monetary policy meetings, preliminary reading for the US December Durable Goods is due later in the day. This will be a good litmus test to see how the US consumer is behaving at the moment ahead of any inflation readings.
Daily digest market movers: Durable Goods on deck
- Headline Durable Goods Orders are expected to increase by 0.8% from -1.2% in November.
- Durable Goods Orders without Transportation are seen rising 0.4% compared to -0.2% in the previous month.
US Dollar Index Technical Analysis: Inflation concerns could grow from hereAlthough the US Dollar Index (DXY) might recover on Tuesday, this does not mean that all downside risk is avoided. Despite its surge back to 108.00, a rejection could occur again, causing the US Dollar Index to fall back to 107.59 or lower. The Relative Strength Index (RSI), which is still below 50, supports that risk possibility as it has more room to move lower before hitting oversold conditions. The road to recovery is still not done and needs more upside. First, the psychological level of 108.00 must be recovered on a daily close. From there, 109.29 (July 14, 2022, high and rising trendline) is next to pare back last week’s losses. Further up, the next upside level to hit before advancing further remains at 110.79 (September 7, 2022, high). On the downside, the 55-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at 107.59 and the October 3, 2023, high at 107.35 acts as a double safety feature to support the DXY price. For now, that looks to be holding, though the Relative Strength Index (RSI) still has some room for the downside. Hence, rather look for 106.52 or even 105.89 as better levels for US Dollar bulls to engage and trigger a reversal. US Dollar Index: Daily ChartMore By This Author:US Dollar Edges Lower At Start Of Central Bank’s Week Gold Eases As Tech Rout Picks Up On Monday US Dollar On Track To Lose Around 2% Of Value This Week