Midweek markets: US dollar disappoints on the back of a slide in yields

By Michiel Willems

With most of the market attention on the US mid-terms action can only be characterised as bitty.

There was no real catalyst for any of the moves we saw yesterday, with some of the moves technical in nature.

It was another positive day for markets in Europe yesterday, with the DAX closing above its 200-day SMA for the first time since 20 January this year, “in a sign that perhaps the lows of the year may well be in,” as Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets UK, put it this a.m.

He stressed the FTSE100 had “a disappointing day underperforming” due to a sharp slide in the oil price which weighed on the oil majors BP and Shell.

“The slide in the oil price appears to have been because of rising Covid infection rates in China which appears to be pricking the optimism around the reopening narrative that drove Brent crude prices up to $100 a barrel at the beginning of the week,” Hewson explained.

Meanwhile, US markets also had another good day, finishing higher for the third day in a row, although well off the highs of the day with the gains being “relatively modest,” as Hewson put it, “despite a fall in treasury yields with the markets trading relatively cautiously ahead of tomorrow’s CPI report.”

“This pullback suggests we will see a lower European open this morning,” he said.

US dollar

The US dollar had a disappointing day on the back of the slide in yields, prompting “some speculation that perhaps we might have seen a short-term top, given that on the US dollar index we’ve struggled to match the highs we saw back in September,” Hewson said.

The weakness has been particularly notable against the Japanese yen, with the greenback retesting the recent lows and 50-day SMA between 145.10 and 145.30.

Hewson said “the pound also underwent a brief move higher on reports that the UK and EU were near a breakthrough about trade rules around the Northern Ireland border.”

Gold, metals and Crypto

Also, gold prices surged above the $1,700 and to one-month highs, after breaking strongly above the 50-day SMA which has managed by and large been able to contain the move lower from the March peaks.

“If we break above the $1,730 level, we could see further strong gains for the yellow metal in what could transpire into a technical move towards $1,800 an ounce,” Hewson said.

Meanwhile, Crypto currencies also had a tough day after crypto currency exchange Binance reached agreement to buy fellow crypto exchange FTX, after the latter experienced liquidity problems, when users rushed to withdraw funds.

“It was only a few months ago that Robinhood announced that FTX had taken a 7.6 per cent stake in the business,” Hewson recalled.

“Bitcoin fell to its lowest levels in two years, before pulling back from those lows, while we also saw double digit percentage losses across the crypto piste, from Dogecoin to Solana,” he concluded.

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