- The US Dollar turns green on Monday ahead of Big Tech earningsÂ
- Tensions in the Middle East ease, triggering a rally in equities.Â
- The US Dollar Index holds onto recent gains around 106.00, but downside pressure is mounting.Â
The US Dollar trades broadly steady on Monday, with markets having a sigh of relief after the weekend remained fairly calm as there was no further retaliation from Iran towards Israel. The de-escalation provides fuel to risk assets, particularly equities, to rally higher this Monday. With the risk-on tone, the Greenback might have some further room to ease.Â
On the economic data front, Monday’s calendar is very thin ahead of the US Gross Domestic Product (GDP) release on Thursday and the US Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (PCE) numbers on Friday. The latter is the most important for this week as the PCE is the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge and another red hot print might lead markets to price in a rate hike before considering any cuts.Â
Daily digest market movers: Tensions to build towards PCE
- The Chicago Fed National Activity Index will be released at 12:30 GMT. The previous reading, for February, was at 0.05.
- The US Treasury is auctioning a 3-month and a 6-month bill at 15:30 GMT.Â
- In the commodity space, both Oil and Gas futures are falling as the tensions in the Middle East ease.
- Equity markets are having a sigh of relief. Asian equities are overall trading up by 1% in both Japan and China. European equities are in line with US equity futures, up near 0.5% on the day.Â
- According to the CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, expectations are further cementing for a no-change to the Fed’s monetary policy in June, with a small 17% chance for a rate cut.
- The benchmark 10-year US Treasury Note trades around 4.64%, recovering further after its decline on Friday to 4.50%.Â
US Dollar Index Technical Analysis: Spreads are widening again
The US Dollar Index (DXY) is facing a little bit of selling pressure at the start of this week. More and more traders are trying to sell the peak in the DXY, with the idea that the Greenback could fall back to lower levels seen in the first three months of this year near 104.00-105.00. With the PCE inflation numbers right at the end of this week, some easing might be taking place until PCE could trigger a turnaround if there is an upbeat surprise.
On the upside, the fresh Tuesday’s high from last week at 106.52 is the level to beat. Further up and above the 107.00 round level, the DXY Index could meet resistance at 107.35, the October 3 high.Â
On the downside, the first important level is 105.88, a pivotal level (since March 2023 with the peaks from November 2023 and recent support as drivers) . Further down, 105.12 and 104.60 should also act as support ahead of the region with the 55-day and the 200-day Simple Moving Averages (SMAs) at 104.17 and 103.91, respectively.
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