Dow Record with Trade Wars, Dollar Tumble Ahead of Fed, Pound Slide with Brexit


(MENAFN- DailyFX) Talking Points:

Trade wars haven't even taken a breather but the Dow and S & P 500 returned to record high with other 'risk' assets charging The Dollar's key breakdown through DXY and EURUSD has yet to turn into a bear trend with Trump and the Fed on tap next week Brexit and NAFTA negotiations took a turn for the worse, Kiwi places its fate in the RBNZ's hands, Ripple surges Sign up for the live webinar coverage of the Federal Reserve and RBNZ rate decision, the fundamental trading outlook, trading Q & As and other regular free events listed on the .

Risk Trends End On a Robust Course but Now for Conviction

There are few overt reasons to be relentlessly bullish in the markets, but that doesn't seem to be holding speculators back. Risk trends soared through this past week, stretching beyond the bounds of the habitual single-direction benchmarks in the US indices. Though more nuanced, it is remarkable to note this past week that where the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average charged to a record high, the speculative-favorite Nasdaq did not. Meanwhile, other global equity indices (DAX, FTSE100 , Nikkei 225) may not be at records but their pace is far more impressive. Where is this enthusiasm originating? That may not matter for pure technicians but it certainly matters to those weighing markets for motivation though fundamentals. 'Animal spirits' can be a powerful catch all, but its use should be more thoroughly vetted when the laundry list of threats is as long as it is now: trade wars, emerging market instability, monetary policy shifting etc. It would be foolish to right off the potential for further stretch, but we should choose vehicles wisely. A record high cost limits risk-reward for US indices, but discount in Emerging Markets (EEM), commodities as risk assets and Yen-based carry trades have value. That said, the contrast between US equities versus practically everything else should raise suspicions over the appeal of chasing risky gains.

Dollar's Breakdown Now Has a Convoluted Fundamental Backdrop and the Fed to Contend With

This past week, the . The DXY Dollar Index broke a rough 'neckline' on a head-and-shoulders pattern and the EURUSD registered the same progress just in reverse. It is difficult to dispute the appeal of the charts, but that doesn't make it certain opportunity. What was the spark for the benchmark's tumble this past session? To assume its safe haven role has conveniently kicked back in despite its jostling for carry trade position or the suggesting trade war blow back is now an issue while sentiment seems to be casting the threat aside seems disingenuous. I personally don't see a particularly compelling reason for this critical break to transition into a prevailing trend. Instead, we should be more critical of the technical cues that would bait us in with no questions asked. Where EURUSD has marked its break relatively cleanly, other breaks are loaded. GBPUSD's break was a function of Brexit and that them has changed course. NZDUSD's impressive channel reversal was prompted by the New Zealand GDP and the RBNZ is ahead. Meanwhile, we are still standing on the boarders of bearish Dollar moves from the likes of AUDUSD , USDCAD and USDJPY . That will make the event risk and themes for the week ahead even more important to signaling trades. The Fed rate decision is higher profile with an expected hike (near certainty in swaps of a 25bp move to 2.00 - 2.25 percent) and updated forecasts. Yet, I will also keep tabs on President Trump's discussions with international counterparts at the UN, updates on trade war retaliations and political risk headlines heading into the mid-term election.

Brexit and US-Canadian Talks Take a Turn for the Worse The US-Chinese trade negotiations aren't the only mediations that are moving headlong in the wrong direction for economic and financial health - yet they are the largest. The status of this degrading relationship is awaiting any indication that China will add to its rather meager $60 billion retaliation to the United States' $200 billion upgrade in its tariffs against China, and whether President Trump will follow through on its threat to go all in (tack on another $267 billion in duties) for any retaliation China sought. Meanwhile, the US has kept the pressure up against Canada in their discussions to replace the NAFTA agreement. A White House advisor suggested we would soon reach the cliff where the US would go it alone in a bilateral agreement with Mexico and without Canada if a compromise wasn't met. The Canadian Dollar still reflects rather little worry despite this situation being stretched out for weeks. As for the between the United Kingdom (UK) and European Union (EU), the state of play is materially worse. After the EU leaders rejected the Chequers Proposal outright after its Salzburg summit, Prime Minister May delivered a speech suggesting the 'no deal' outcome is perhaps now more likely than actual compromise. The Sterling took a vicious hit for the news, and it has further room to retreat if officials don't do some triage.

Keep Wary of Volatility for the New Zealand Dollar, Crude Oil and Ripple

While we should keep close tabs on the dominant themes and most liquid players in the system, we should also not presume absolute clarity in their bearing. That will mean trading these considerations and markets will require thorough analysis and certain finesse. However, if you want your trades to be more straightforward - though perhaps holding out less potential - there are more discrete options to follow across the markets. In the FX market, the New Zealand Dollar posted an important, bullish technical break last week with the 2Q New Zealand GDP beat. To turn the break into anything resembling a trend, the upcoming Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) rate decision is crucial. This is a carry currency that has lost all its carry appeal. Over the weekend, a two-day OPEC meeting will weigh on supply figures under the glare of headlines that quote President Trump demanding price relief for the oligarchy. I remain dubious that the event can supply a clear bearing, but it can generate volatility. And, an unusual glance into the more restrained cryptocurrency arena, this past week registered a massive rally from Ripple. Up nearly 200 percent in a week's time at Friday's high, volatility is not unusual in speculative assets. But don't presume we are having a redux of the Bitcoin boom of late 2017. We discuss all of this and more in today's Trading Video.

If you want to download my Manic-Crisis calendar, you can find the updated file .


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