Simple and straightforward. That was our roadmap back in early March.
Now, almost three months later, the dollar is putting that strategy to the test as it approaches 105 from below.
That multi-month consolidation with “continuation pattern” written all over it never continued lower.
Instead, the dollar index has chopped sideways within a tight range for almost six months. And the evidence is beginning to support a possible upside resolution…
The lack of broad US dollar weakness caught my attention back in April.
Our G-10 currency index and US dollar advance-decline line were printing potential higher lows, while DXY was on the verge of undercutting pivot lows from earlier in the year. The divergence suggested burgeoning USD strength.
Former resistance turns into potential support – and vice versa.
That’s Polarity 101. It’s a pattern found throughout the market. It doesn’t matter the asset class – Bitcoin or Berkshire. It’s simply human psychology at work.
These levels often mark missed opportunities. And, in the process, they create price memory that fuels increased activity. Traders and investors are driven to transact at these levels, highlighting supply and demand zones that act as support or resistance.
Why does this matter right now?
Because gold futures have sliced through near-term support, careening toward a level etched in the minds of goldbugs everywhere…
I’m talking about the 2011 highs!
Gold futures recently undercut a key level marked by the February pivot highs and last month’s pivot lows – a polarity zone.
Classic intermarket ratios – copper versus gold, regional banks $KRE versus REITs $IYR, and the Russell 2000 $IWM versus the S&P 500 $SPY – all point to lower yields.
This has been going on for months. Some may argue that these ratios are broken or no longer carry significant insight into the direction of rates.
It may be true that the strong relationship between the above ratios and interest rates has indeed decoupled.
But it’s not solely relative trends hinting at declining yields.
The stocks that benefit the most from a rising rate environment also look terrible on absolute terms…
The ProShares Equities for Rising Rates ETF $EQRR tells the story:
I can’t think of a stronger trend than the dollar-yen last year. It absolutely ripped to the point we were joking everything priced in yen looked good – even gold!
But it wasn’t the only market trending higher at the time. The US dollar and interest rates also rallied together.
Today’s USD/JPY strength raises a painful question for many investors…
Will interest rates and the US Dollar Index $DXY follow?
Before we delve into the broader implications of a USD/JPY rally, let’s outline the setup for those who trade forex markets.
Check out the dollar-yen reaching its highest level since November 2022, completing a six-month consolidation:
The bears have found a new home: gold mining stocks.
Silver’s breakdown earlier this month raised the caution flag for the entire precious metals space.
Less than two weeks later, gold futures and mining stocks are falling under the wrath of increased selling pressure. Precious metals bears are winning the battle as support levels fall to the wayside.
Meanwhile, the bulls are reluctant to leave without a fight…
Buyers were hammering a key retracement level from below. The way I learned it, "The more times a level is tested, the higher the likelihood it breaks."
Three months later…
The July contract is knocking on the door – again!
How polite.
Check out July cotton nearing the January 2022 closing high of 88.34:
Growth stocks seem concerned with only one thing – printing fresh highs.
The Tech sector ETF $XLK posted new 52-week highs yesterday. And the Communications ETF $XLC rallied within reach after taking out its Aug. ‘22 pivot highs.
So where does that leave bonds and other long-duration assets?
If these base breakouts across growth sectors hold, I imagine bonds have some serious catching up to do…
Why?
Growth stocks tend to trend with bonds since they’re both long-duration assets. Changes in interest rates directly impact US Treasuries and affect tech stocks more than other equities.
Check out the tight relationship between the Long-Term Treasury ETF $TLT and the Technology sector $XLK:
Last Friday’s action sent flashbacks of 2022 across my screen.
It was all King Dollar last week as risk assets and bonds sold off in tandem.
But before we all get carried away talking about the next leg higher for the dollar, let’s zoom out to get a read on where the DXY truly stands…
In the middle of a short-term range.
The US Dollar Index $DXY finished last Friday, posting its best week since peaking in late September 2022.
But it’s been stuck between 105 and 101 since December:
The DXY might have gained 1.5% last week, but it’s stuck below a key retracement level. It’s a range-bound mess like much of the market despite the recent bout of strength.
Dr. Copper is limping into the close – on pace for its worst week since last November.
The risk-off tone that began earlier in the week is intensifying. Crude oil is turning lower. Gold is pulling back. And the equity indexes are drowning in a sea of red.
But nothing stings stock market bulls quite as badly as the breakdown in copper futures…
Copper just undercut a key polarity zone marked by the August 2022 pivot highs.
The US Dollar Index $DXY is clinging to the 100 level, refusing to let go despite new 52-week highs for the British pound and a steady rise in the euro.