- The US Dollar at Monday’s low ahead of Trump and Putin on Tuesday.
- US bond markets are looking for direction ahead of the upcoming Fed meeting on Wednesday.
- The US Dollar Index dips to lower end of its range after US Retail Sales data on Monday.
The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the performance of the US Dollar (USD) against six major currencies, gears up for a very heavy week filled with geopolitical events and the Federal Reserve (Fed) meeting. At the time of writing on Monday, the DXY index edges lower and trades near 103.50 after the United States (US) Retail Sales data release for February.
On the geopolitical front, a high-stakes meeting between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin is scheduled on Tuesday, with the two parties to discuss territory and to divide up certain assets, according to President Trump on Sunday at Airforce One, Bloomberg reported.
The second big development is in German politics, with a vote on a €1 trillion spending package on Tuesday to boost Europe’s weapon industry, which would spill over into the whole European industry. If an agreement and backing can be reached with the Greens, a two-thirds majority would be present to get the plan through the German Bundestag.
On the economic data front, all eyes will be on the Federal Reserve (Fed) and the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) on Wednesday, where every voting Fed member will be penciling in their projection of where the central bank’s policy rate will be in the near and medium term. Ahead of the Fed’s rate decision and Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s speech, US Retail Sales for February saw a dreadful revision while current Retail Sales fell flat.
Daily digest market movers: Consumer does not turn around
- President Trump said he will speak with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday as the US presses for an end to fighting in Ukraine, Bloomberg reports. On Sunday, during a flight on Air Force One, President Trump confirmed that the discussion will be about territory and dividing up certain assets, and that there is “a very good chance” for a deal.
- At 12:30 GMT, US Retail Sales for February came out:
- The monthly figure came in at 0.2%, missing the 0.7% expected, from the previous 1.2% contraction in January (downwardly revised from -0.9%).
- The yearly number came in 3.1% against the previous 3.9% (downwardly revised from 4.2%).
- At the same time, the NY Empire State Manufacturing Index for March took a beating, contracting by 20, missing the small 1.9 contraction expected, coming from a positive 5.7 in February.
- Equities are heading into the green with both European and US equity indices seeing gains near 0.50% on average.
- The CME Fedwatch Tool sees a 99.0% chance for no interest rate changes in the upcoming Fed meeting on Wednesday. The chances of a rate cut at the May 7 meeting currently stand at 27.5%.
- The US 10-year yield trades around 4.30%, off its near five-month low of 4.10% printed on March 4.
US Dollar Index Technical Analysis: Await the breakout either way
The US Dollar Index (DXY) is stuck in a range between 103.18 and 103.99. However, seeing the geopolitical risk events and the Fed decision this week, a breakout looks inevitable. Watch out for any false breaks and stick to clear technical levels that make sense, such as the 105.00 round level on the upside and the 101.90 on the downside.
Upside risk is a rejection at 104.00 that could result in more downturn. If bulls can avoid that, look for a large sprint higher towards the 105.00 round level, with the 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at 105.01. Once broken through that zone, a string of pivotal levels, such as 105.53 and 105.89, will present as caps.
On the downside, the 103.00 round level could be considered a bearish target in case US yields roll off again, with even 101.90 not unthinkable if markets further capitulate on their long-term US Dollar holdings.
US Dollar Index: Daily Chart
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(This story was corrected on March 17 at 12:46GMT to say that the DXY trades near 103.60 after the United States (US) Retail Sales data release for February, not before)
(This story was corrected on March 17 at 13:05GMT to say that “the yearly number came in 3.1% against the previous 3.9% (downwardly revised from 4.2%), not ” the yearly number was at 4.2% previously and fell to 3.1% while that 4.2% previously got revised to 3.9%.”)