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Investors Sideline the Yen

January 25, 2022

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

Risk assets are on the ropes after taking a series of heavy hits last week.

Equities have been a sea of red across the board as selling pressure broadens out. Growth continues to collapse, and even many of the latest leadership groups –  like banks – are failing to hold their breakouts.

When we look inside the stock market, there's certainly a bear market feel to the price action in recent weeks. For example, offensive areas are being sold indiscriminately while defensive sectors make new relative highs. 

But when we look outside the stock market, the story is very different. Despite the volatility, we’re still not seeing much of a bid in traditional safe-haven assets.

In today’s post, we’ll focus on the Japanese yen. But it’s the same story for gold and Treasuries.

Here is a look at all three. From top to bottom, this is the Gold ETF $GLD, the US Treasuries ETF $IEF, and the Japanese yen $JPY:

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Headwinds Ease as the DXY Dips

January 18, 2022

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

What started out as a potential bullish continuation pattern in the US Dollar Index $DXY has turned into a near-term top.

After weeks of failing to hold breakouts on an individual currency basis, the tight coil in the DXY finally resolved lower.

The brief reprieve in USD strength was immediately felt across markets last week, with cyclical/value stocks and procyclical commodities catching an aggressive bid.

Now that the headwinds associated with dollar strength appear to be easing, will risk assets enjoy a tailwind in the form of sustained USD weakness?

Or was this just the latest fake-out from the DXY?

Let’s take a look at a couple of charts and highlight the levels we're watching in the coming weeks and months.

First up is the US Dollar Index:

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Is the Yen Whispering “Buy”?

January 11, 2022

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

There's been a subtle risk-on tone in recent weeks. With each passing day, it's been spreading to more and more markets and charts.

Rates are rising around the globe. The underlying uptrend in commodities is intact and looks ready for another up leg. Our equal-weight commodity index is resolving higher from its current range. And cyclical stocks such as energy and financials are breaking out to new highs.

All of these events speak to a growing risk appetite and support higher prices for risk assets.

Although, two areas where we aren't seeing such clear evidence that risk-seeking behavior is re-entering the market would be currencies and our intermarket ratios.

The AUD/JPY cross is still stuck within a range. High-yield bonds $HYG relative to their safer alternatives -- US Treasuries $IEI -- failed to hold their recent highs. And the copper/gold ratio is a hot mess.

We would expect to see decisive upside resolutions from these charts if investors are positioning for another leg higher.

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Capturing the Krona

January 4, 2022

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

The rally in the US Dollar Index $DXY is stalling out.

With each passing day, dollar internals are weakening, and the prospect of a bullish resolution from the current continuation pattern in DXY is diminishing. We expect these patterns to resolve quickly. And when they don’t, that’s information.

Some other things worth noting are that commercial hedgers hold a large short position in DXY futures and the near-term bearish trend for individual dollar crosses is expanding (up 20% from last week to a staggering 80%).

The bottom line is evidence continues to stack against the USD.

With that as our backdrop, let’s check in on a long USD trade that was triggered in November and outline how we want to navigate the coming days and weeks.

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Strength Narrows for the USD

December 28, 2021

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

As 2022 approaches, the latest evidence from currency markets suggest the US Dollar Index $DXY could be stalling out.

Whether it resolves higher from the current continuation pattern is a key question with broad market implications. While dollar strength has been a headwind during the second half of 2021, we think it cools off coming into 2022.

In our view, there's a good chance a weaker dollar will actually help put a bid in risk assets in the near future. This hasn’t been the case in a while, so let’s discuss what’s changed to make us feel this way.

Notice the short-term weakness in our US dollar trend summary table:

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CAD Catches Lower

December 21, 2021

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

Major world currencies continue to struggle against the US dollar.

Both the euro and British pound have been coiling near 52-week lows against the dollar. We’re also seeing weakness spread among commodity-centric currencies, as the Canadian dollar hit new 52-week lows this week, and the Australian dollar accomplished the same earlier in the month. As for the safe-haven Japanese yen, USD/JPY hit its highest level since 2017 at the end of November. 

The bottom line is that we continue to see broad strength from the greenback.

Meanwhile, the US Dollar Index $DXY continues to consolidate within a tight continuation pattern.

As we wait for a resolution either higher or lower, we can look to these individual forex pairs for an indication of which direction we’re likely headed.

Let’s revisit the potential failed breakdown from the Australian dollar earlier in the month and the recent action in the Canadian dollar for clues.

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Are Investors Ready for a Higher Dollar?

December 14, 2021

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

All eyes have been on the US dollar and interest rates in recent weeks.

Last week, we saw a timely kick save from the bond market as the 30-year reclaimed its summer lows. Whether the latest rebound in rates will hold is yet to be seen as the 10 and 30 are currently chopping sideways just above our risk levels. We’re watching the long end of the curve closely to see how yields react at these critical levels.

But what about the US dollar?

When we analyze the US Dollar Index $DXY, it’s hard to be bearish, as price is consolidating in a tight continuation pattern following a base breakout and swift leg higher last month. As usual, the direction in which the DXY resolves will have broad market implications and will affect risk assets around the globe.

We know you’re probably tired of hearing it, but this is another big week for markets -- especially the dollar!

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Bulls Bounce Back

December 7, 2021

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

Last week, we pointed out that commodity-centric currencies were beginning to slide. 

Our petrocurrency index was making new 52-week lows, and the Australian dollar was on the verge of breaking down. By Friday’s close, the AUD/USD cross looked to have completed a topping pattern and was trading at its lowest level since the summer of 2020.

Seeing one of the world’s leading commodity currencies break down from a major distribution pattern would not bode well for commodities and other risk assets.

But the bulls aren't ready to roll over yet. Investors are back on offense this week, as buyers have already repaired all or most of the damage that was done to stocks and commodities last week.

They needed to come out swinging after the latest flurry of selling pressure… And that’s exactly what they did! 

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Commodity-Centric Currencies Slide

November 30, 2021

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

As we near the close of another month, crude oil is once again front and center.

At the end of October, black gold was ripping to new seven-year highs while interest rates rose and cyclical stocks kicked back into gear. 

Today, this picture has dramatically changed. 

Crude oil is currently about 20% off its highs, as prices have collapsed back below our risk level.

Crude dropped $10 during last Friday’s volatile session and continues to slide lower this week. Just look at this bearish candlestick on the monthly chart:

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Emerging Currencies Fall

November 23, 2021

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

At the beginning of the month, we pointed out the disconnect between risk assets and the currency market

Stocks up and down the cap scale were breaking out to new highs and energy futures were resolving higher from multi-year bases -- all while emerging-market and commodity-centric currencies approached year-to-date lows.

Something wasn’t right. 

We’d expect these risk-on currencies to catch higher given their strong correlation with other risk assets. But this hasn’t been the case. In fact, seeing as currency markets had been out of sync with other asset classes for months, we really didn’t want to overthink this development.

But what appeared to be another mixed intermarket signal proved a valuable warning.

Fast-forward to today and the weakness that was evident among emerging-market currencies is spreading to stocks and commodities. Small-caps and crude oil are retesting critical breakout levels, and cyclical stocks are failing to sustain their recent moves.

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Hurdles Ahead for the Dollar

November 16, 2021

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

The US Dollar Index $DXY is pressing to new highs, disregarding what many think it should be doing based on historic intermarket relationships.

Considering the bullish developments and new highs from risk assets, the strength from the US dollar continues to be a head-scratcher.

But will the breakout in the DXY hold, or will it roll over and confirm the signals coming from bonds, stocks, and commodities?

When we broke down the US Dollar Index last month, we pointed out that its strength was rather narrow in terms of how it was performing relative to most individual currencies. Long story short, the recent rally in DXY has been fueled primarily by its two largest components -- the euro and the yen. These two currencies make up more than 70% of the DXY weighting, and the fact that they are at new 52-week lows explains why the index is at new highs.

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Divergences Don't Last Forever

November 9, 2021

From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley

Correlations often work... until they don’t. It’s just the nature of intermarket relationships.

We can see a prime example in the recent action between the US dollar and risk assets.

The dollar has been marching to the beat of its own drum, as it's shown an unusually strong positive correlation with commodities since this summer.

Although the inverse correlation is not as strong with equities, it still exists. But the USD’s resilience during the second half of this year hasn’t stopped stocks from screaming higher. 

While we definitely aren’t in an environment where USD weakness is a tailwind, the evidence continues to stack up in favor of the bulls and risk assets. 

The dollar is just one data point. But it’s a rather important one, as the direction of King Dollar has proven to have a profound impact on other asset classes.

Today, we’re going to highlight the decoupling of USD relationships and what it could mean for the rally in risk assets.

Let’s dive in!