The US dollar has been moving like a yo-yo during the centerpiece event of the week which was the Federal Reserve on Wednesday. As measured by the DXY index, the price of the dollar vs. a basket of currencies has ranged between 111.57 and 110.612, initially spiking on the Fed announcements before dropping and recovering again in a 78.6% retracement of the range. At the time of writing, DXY is trading at 111.30, 1.00% higher on the day.
The US dollar has been in demand on Wednesday on two main counts. The expectations for higher rates and the decision by Russian President Vladimir Putin to mobilize more troops for the conflict in Ukraine had already pushed the dollar to a two-decade high before the Fed announced its hawkish projections following a 75bps rate hike, as expected.
Meanwhile, Fed's chairman, Jerome Powell has been speaking to the press:
The markets are anticipating for the US dollar to stay strong but some analysts argue that the greenback is significantly overvalued. After all, since the beginning of the year, the dollar index has soared by nearly 16% in the biggest yearly percentage gain since 1972.
"We expect the U.S. dollar to remain firm in the short run but we remain reluctant to factor in additional, sustained US dollar gains from here and we think it would be complacent to dismiss out-of-hand downside risks here," said Shaun Osborne, chief FX strategist, at Scotiabank in Toronto.
From a near-term perspective, if the bears commit at the 78.6% ratio, then there are considerable arguments for a downside scenario. The trendline support could come under pressure and if this gives, we will see key 110.50 under pressure again. On the other hand, from a weekly perspective, the bias is to the upside towards 112.50:
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