The US Dollar edged narrowly lower in overnight trade as prices digested following yesterday’s breakneck advance.
While a wide spectrum of commentary attributed the move to an upbeat
batch of US economic data, another catalyst was probably at work.
Indeed, the greenback began yesterday’s advance hours before April’s
Durable Goods report – the day’s first bit of scheduled event risk –
came across the wires.
Rather, the US unit rallied alongside German Bund
prices as European bond markets came online. Tellingly, Greece’s
benchmark 10-year government bond yield advanced in tandem. This
suggests the US Dollar’s advance was probably reflective of haven demand
amid Greece-inspired risk aversion rather than anything on the domestic front.
In fact, Fed funds futures finished the day broadly
unchanged from Friday’s close. Had US news-flow inspired the rally, the
priced-in outlook would probably show an up-shift in the expected
timeline for the first post-QE FOMC
rate hike. The magnitude of volatility may have reflected returning
liquidity as several key markets returned from the long weekend (the US,
UK, Germany and Hong Kong were offline Monday).
Renewed fears followed comments from Greek Interior
Minister Nikos Voutsis, who told local TV station Mega that Athens will
not make June’s payment to the IMF because the money “isn’t there to be
given”. This was followed by ominous comments from ESM head Klaus Regling
yesterday, who hinted that a missed payment to the IMF would impact the
likelihood of a deal with EU lenders and potentially herald insolvency.
Looking ahead, a quiet economic calendar in European and US trading hours is likely to keep this narrative at the forefront, particularly as G7 finance ministers and central bank chiefs
begin a three-day meeting in Dresden. Greece is likely to feature
prominently in the discussions, and traders will keep a close eye on
headlines emerging from the sit-down for direction cues.
Asia Session
GMT
|
CCY
|
EVENT
|
ACT
|
EXP
|
PREV
|
00:30
|
Westpac Leading Index (MoM) (APR)
|
0.1%
|
-
|
-0.3%
|
|
01:30
|
AUD
|
Construction Work Done (1Q)
|
-2.4%
|
-1.4%
|
-0.6%
|
01:30
|
CNY
|
Industrial Profits (YoY) (APR)
|
2.6%
|
-
|
-0.4%
|
01:45
|
CNY
|
Westpac-MNI Consumer Sentiment (MAY)
|
111.1
|
-
|
111.1
|
05:00
|
Small Business Confidence (MAY)
|
48.1
|
48.0
|
47.4
|
European Session
GMT
|
CCY
|
EVENT
|
EXP
|
PREV
|
IMPACT
|
06:00
|
UBS Consumption Indicator (APR)
|
-
|
1.35
|
Low
|
|
06:00
|
German GfK Consumer Confidence (JUN)
|
10.0
|
10.1
|
Low
|
Critical Levels
CCY
|
Supp 3
|
Supp 2
|
Supp 1
|
Pivot Point
|
Res 1
|
Res 2
|
Res 3
|
1.0880
|
1.0931
|
1.0954
|
1.0982
|
1.1005
|
1.1033
|
1.1084
|
|
1.5376
|
1.5427
|
1.5449
|
1.5478
|
1.5500
|
1.5529
|
1.5580
|
Written by Ilya Spivak, Currency Strategist for DailyFX.com
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