The National - News

Hawkish Fed to sustain greenback’s bull run against major currencies

- GAURAV KASHYAP Comment Gaurav Kashyap is risk manager at Equiti Securities Currencies Brokers. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the views of Equiti Securities Currencies Brokers

Markets continue to trade heavily and in favour of the US dollar despite an optimistic French election outcome at the weekend and a host of technology companies that are set to continue reporting their earnings this week.

The US Dollar Index continues to trade higher. At the time of writing, the index moved above 101.5 – its highest level since March 2020.

Fundamenta­lly, not much has changed as markets continue to price in a more hawkish US Federal Reserve. This divergence from other central banks resulted in the dollar beating down other major currencies, including the Japanese yen, British pound and the euro.

Technicall­y, the picture looks very strong for US dollar bulls. Not only did the 50-week exponentia­l moving average cross the 200-week moving average, but the 100-week moving average also crossed the 200-week moving average, which is a very strong technical indicator that the dollar rally is not complete.

Fundamenta­lly, the picture also looks good for US dollar bulls. Last week, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, in comments to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, said that a 50-basis point rise would be on the horizon when the central bank next convenes on May 3 and 4.

Fed policy continues to be dictated by inflation. Such hawkishnes­s will keep the bull run intact for the greenback through the summer.

The Bank of Japan is to announce its interest rate decision this week. With no changes expected to rates, investors will take more cues from its policy statement and its views on yields.

The bank seeks to keep 10year yields at about zero per cent. With yields stubbornly inching higher, many will look for clues on what it will decide: either widen the acceptable range or ditch yield control policy.

Also on the calendar this week is US first-quarter gross domestic product data, along with Australian and eurozone inflation figures. Australian inflation is expected to have increased by 4.6 per cent a year, up from 3.5 per cent. A stronger-than-expected reading will support the Australian dollar against the US dollar in the short term. However, the move will be short-lived.

Meanwhile, US first-quarter GDP is estimated to slow to 1.1 per cent, from 6.9 per cent. Such a vast slowdown should cause intraday volatility in the US Dollar Index but should not be enough to change the short- to medium-term trend for the greenback.

Eurozone inflation is expected to remain unchanged at 7.4 per cent a year while the Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices print, excluding energy and food, is expected to rise to 3 per cent, from 2.9 per cent.

While this would suggest a hawkish move in the euro on the dollar, the large divergence in policy between the Fed and the European Central Bank will keep the currency pair under pressure in the short term.

The Euro-dollar is trading at March 2020 lows. The next level of support kicks in at 1.064, which could be tested during the summer months.

Despite the start of the earnings season, US equity markets remain under pressure as Fed hawkishnes­s continues to weigh on sentiment. With several technology companies such as Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet set to announce their results this week, it will be interestin­g to see if there will be enough momentum to stop the slide.

In my previous column for The National, I had noted the cyclical rotation out of technology and into more mainstream industries. That trend has continued, with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 index affected by the most pronounced losses.

Can a stronger run of earnings from technology companies stop the current slide? Technical data points to the contrary.

Looking at the UT 100 index (Nasdaq 100), we had a recent move where the 100-day exponentia­l moving average crossed below the 200-day exponentia­l moving average.

This is a strong bearish indicator and suggests the weakness in the tech-heavy Nasdaq index could continue in the interim.

Commoditie­s also continue to trade softly. Oil remains under pressure as Chinese coronaviru­s lockdowns hurt demand while gold is testing support above $1,910, a break-off that could expose $1,890 levels in the coming weeks.

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