US Dollar Rebounds On Strong GDP Data, Low Eurozone Inflation


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  • The Greenback trades in the green against all major currencies. 
  • US traders are on the lookout for US Jobless Claims and Personal Consumption Expenditure Price Index numbers. 
  • The US Dollar Index climbs above 103 and could still flip this week’s overall performance into positive territory. 
  • The US Dollar (USD) bulls are back, alive and kicking, as the Greenback is soaring on Thursday. The surprise revival comes on the back of a sudden meltdown in the Euro and other major pairs. Strong activity data in the US, coupled with lower-than-expected inflation figures in the Eurozone, are quickly shifting traders’ bets. Investors are pricing in a quick rate cut from the European Central Bank (ECB), whereas the interest rate differential between the US Dollar and the Euro got very tight at the beginning of the week. On the economic front, traders already revised their earlier selling moves in the Greenback after the US Gross Domestic Product (GDP) numbers revealed the US economy performed strongly in the third quarter, despite headwinds from the elevated rates regime. More guidance to come from the US data on Thursday with the US Jobless Claims and Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index numbers, which are the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge. Any further decline in the index will be welcome, though a steady and marginal decline could still support a stronger US Dollar. 
     Daily digest: The Fed will be watching

  • At 13:30 GMT, this Thursday a big batch of data points is to be released:
    1. US Initial Jobless Claims are expected to head from 209,000 to 220,000.
    2. Continuing Jobless Claims were at 1,840,000 and are expected to head to 1,865,000.
    3. Monthly Headline Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index for October is expected to decline from 0.4% to 0.1%.
    4. Headline Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index on a yearly basis is expected to head from 3.4% to 3%.
    5. Monthly Core Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index for October is expected to slow from 0.3% to 0.2%.
    6. Core Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index on a yearly basis is forecast to head from 3.7% to 3.5%.
    7. Personal Income for October is seen declining from 0.7% to 0.2%.
    8. Personal Spending for October is set to decline alongside Personal Income, from 0.7% to 0.2%.
  • Near 14:05, New York Fed President John Williams will speak.
  • The Chicago Purchasing Managers Index is due, staying in contraction from 44 to 45.4.
  • At 15:00, the Pending Home Sales index will come out for October, with the monthly performance shrinking from 1.1% to -2%, while the yearly performance is expected to head from -11% to -8.8%.
  • Right at the end of this Thursday, the US Treasury is heading to markets to allocate a 4-week bill. 
  • Equities are on track to print one of the best performing November in a long time. After a few days of hesitation, indices across the globe are in the green with all Asian major indices increasing near 0.50%. European equities are marginally in profit, while US Futures are rather in line with Asian profits, near 0.50%.
  • The CME Group’s FedWatch Tool shows that markets are pricing in a 95.8% chance that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates unchanged at its meeting in December.  
  • The benchmark 10-year US Treasury Note trades at 4.29%, and is finding a floor after the earlier decline this week.
     
  • US Dollar Index technical analysis: losing the elastic bandThe US Dollar has been stretched long and far enough in its devaluation – like an elastic band. Earlier this week the Relative Strength Index (RSI) was indicating that the elastic band was overstretched to the downside after entering oversold, and some unwinding was granted. The unwinding is starting to take place and could still put this weekly performance of the US Dollar Index (DXY) in the green if the current trend continues into Friday’s US close. The DXY is making its way up towards the 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA), which is near 103.59. The DXY could still make it back up there, should US traders come back in the market and start buying the current dip. A two-tiered pattern of a daily close lower followed by an opening higher would quickly see the DXY back above 104.28, with the 200-day and 100-day SMA turned over to support levels. To the downside, historic levels from August are coming into play, when the Greenback summer rally took place. The lows of June make sense to look for some support, near 101.92, just below 102. Should more events take place that initiate further declines in US rates, expect to see a near full unwind of the 2023 summer rally, heading to 100.82, followed by 100.00 and 99.41.More By This Author:USD/CAD Price Analysis: Treads Water Near 1.3600 Backed By A Barrier At 23.6% Fibonacci GBP/USD Grapples To Extend Gains Near 1.2700, US PCE Price Index Eyed GBP/USD Attracts Some Buyers Near 1.2700, US PCE Data Looms

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