The US Dollar (USD) stays resilient on Wednesday after having weakened against its major rivals on Tuesday. Investors refrain from making large bets while awaiting March Consumer Price Index (CPI) data from the US.
Following a bullish start to the week, the US Dollar Index (DXY) turned south on Tuesday and declined toward 102.00. The mixed performance of Wall Street and the lack of action in the US Treasury bond yields, however, helped the USD limit its losses in the second half of the day. The CME Group FedWatch Tool shows that markets are pricing in a 67% probability of one more 25 basis points Federal Reserve (Fed) rate hike in May. March CPI could trigger a big action in the USD by influencing the Fed’s rate outlook.
EUR/USD closed in positive territory above 1.0900 on Tuesday, snapping a two-day losing streak. Although the pair stays relatively quiet early Wednesday, the near-term technical outlook remains bullish with the Relative Strength Index (RSI) indicator on the daily chart holding comfortably above 50. Moreover, the gap between the 20-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) and the 50-day SMA continue to widen following the bullish cross that occurred on April 3.
EUR/USD is likely to face interim resistance at 1.0950 (static level) before targeting 1.1000 (end-point of the latest uptrend, psychological level) and 1.1035 (multi-month high set in early February).
On the downside, 1.0840 (20-day SMA) aligns as first support before 1.0800 (psychological level), 1.0740 (50-day SMA) and 1.0700 (100-day SMA).
Stock markets in the US are likely to turn bearish if the Federal Reserve goes into a tightening cycle to battle rising inflation. Higher interest rates will ramp up the cost of borrowing and weigh on business investment. In that scenario, investors are likely to refrain from taking on high-risk, high-return positions. As a result of risk aversion and tight monetary policy, the US Dollar Index (DXY) should rise while the broad S&P 500 Index declines, revealing an inverse correlation.
During times of monetary loosening via lower interest rates and quantitative easing to ramp up economic activity, investors are likely to bet on assets that are expected to deliver higher returns, such as shares of technology companies. The Nasdaq Composite is a technology-heavy index and it is expected to outperform other major equity indexes in such a period. On the other hand, the US Dollar Index should turn bearish due to the rising money supply and the weakening safe-haven demand.
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