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       #Post#: 214--------------------------------------------------
        Dollar Remains Firm, Equities Slide
       By: Marc Chandler Date: November 16, 2014, 7:13 am
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       There have been important developments over the past 24 hours,
       and the net response has been a generally firmer US dollar and
       weaker equity markets. Bond yields are mixed, but US Treasury
       yields saw their biggest single day rise yesterday this year.
       Asia followed suit, but European bond yields are mostly lower.
       There were three important signals from the US yesterday that
       will continue to influence the investment climate. First, in
       terms of GDP, the key measure, real private final purchases,
       which covers almost 85% of the economy, excludes inventories,
       net exports and government spending. It tends to be less
       volatile, and a better gauge of the underlying economy. It rose
       3.1% in Q2 and 1.0% in Q1. That puts H1 growth at 2%, which is
       probably a more accurate description of its pace.
       For the economy to achieve the FOMC's central forecast of 2.2%
       this year, the economy needs to grow 3.5% in H2. While possible,
       this seems unlikely, especially given what appears to be the
       rise in Q2 inventories All the data for Q2 has not been reported
       yet, which makes the initial estimates subject to significant
       revisions.
       The other two signals come from the Federal Reserve. The
       statement following the FOMC meeting contained two noteworthy
       assessments. First, the FOMC recognized that the risk that
       inflation is persistently below 2% has diminished "somewhat".
       This is the say that the perceived risks of deflation have
       eased. Second, the FOMC still insisted the under-utilization of
       the labor market is still "significant". This means that while
       the economy continues to evolve in the desired direction, it has
       not been sufficient to alter the Fed's course. It will finish
       the tapering in October. A rate hike still seems a couple of
       quarters or so away.
       Euro area news has been mostly constructive. Yesterday,
       investors learned that the credit environment in the euro area
       has improved, on both the supply and demand. Today investors
       learn that both German and French consumption picked up in June
       and by more than expected. In Germany retail sales rose 1.3% (vs
       1.0% expected). French consumer spending rose 0.9%. The
       consensus was for a 0.4% decline though the May series was
       revised to show a 0.7% gain instead of 1%.
       The market also learned today that labor market improved in both
       Germany and Italy. In Italy the unemployment rate slipped to
       12.3% from 12.6%. The consensus did not expect it to have
       changed. This matches the lowest rate since last August. In
       Germany, the unemployment rate was steady at 6.7%, but the
       number of unemployed fell 12k, whereas the market had expected
       only a 5k decline.
       On the inflation front, yesterday's news from Germany and Spain
       warned of downside risks to the reading for the region as a
       whole. Sure enough, the preliminary aggregate reading came in at
       0.4, whereas the consensus had forecast an unchanged pace of
       0.5%. The core rate was unchanged at 0.8%. This will be
       disappointing to the ECB where the staff had forecast a 0.7%
       rate for this year. Nevertheless, it most likely will not elicit
       a policy response at next week's meeting.
       The impact of the TLTROs, which will be launched in September
       must be monitored first. In addition, the weakening of the euro
       is also helpful. It has declined 6 cents against the dollar
       since early May and is off about 3.2% on a trade weighted-basis
       since peaking in March.
       The euro has struggled to resurface above $1.34, and a break of
       yesterday's low just below $1.3370 would likely target $1.3300
       and then $1.3230. As the euro has entered territory not seen
       since Q4 13, implied volatility has risen. For example, 3-month
       implied vol has risen to about 5.5% from 4.75% in the middle of
       the month.
       Sterling continues to under-perform and this is reflected in the
       euro's gains on the cross. The euro is trading at two-week highs
       against sterling and is pushed through the 20-day moving average
       (~GBP0.7925). It has not closed above this average since late
       March. Although the euro is holding above yesterday's lows,
       sterling has not. The target appears to be a retracement
       objective near $1.6830, and a break of that could spur another
       cent decline. The economy appears to have lost some momentum and
       the longs which had built up a large position in the futures
       market, are bailing out. Also, the Scottish referendum draws
       closer, and this may also curb the bull's appetite.
       The Australian dollar is also under-performing today. It has
       been pushed below $0.9300 for the first time since early June.
       The ostensible trigger is the unexpected 5% drop in building
       approvals. The consensus expected a flat report. This is an
       important piece of data because it had appeared that the housing
       market had picked up the slack emanating for the contraction in
       the mining sector.
       In addition, Australia reported disturbing tends in import and
       export prices in Q2. Import prices fell twice what was expected.
       The 3% decline nearly offset the Q1 gain of 3.2%. Many
       economists will see this as evidence that the Australian dollar
       is over-valued. Exports prices also fell almost twice what was
       expected. The 7.9% decline (after a revised 2.8% gain in Q1)
       likely reflects the decline in commodity prices, especially iron
       ore.
       The Australian dollar has fallen through the 100-day moving
       average (~$0.9322) for the first time since March. The 200-day
       moving average is found just near $0.9185, just below the bottom
       end of the four-month range ($0.9200).
       The North American session features the US Q2 employment cost
       index, which is one of several measures of labor market price
       developments. It is regarded as among the most useful. It is
       expected to have risen 0.5%. This would be just above the
       longer-term average (5-years), but after a 0.3% rise in Q1, the
       H1 average is spot on the average. The weekly initial jobless
       claims and the Chicago PMI may also draw attention, but the real
       interest is of course in tomorrow's non-farm payroll report.
       Canada reports May GDP, and it is expected to rise 0.4% for a
       2.3% year-over-year pace. The US dollar is holding just below
       CAD1.0920. Last month's high was set near CAD1.0960, and
       although this is the risk, the market is looking a bit
       stretched.
       Lastly, two other issues to note. First, we do not think an
       Argentina default will have the kind of immediate contagion that
       its previous default sparked. However, we are concerned about
       the precedent's being set for sovereign restructuring more
       broadly.
       Second, we continue to put significance in the gap lower opening
       in the S&P 500 last Friday after setting record highs last
       Thursday. This gap was entered yesterday but was not closed. The
       longer the gap is unfilled, the more bearish it is, we have
       argued. Now we see the 5-day average is poised to fall through
       the 20-day average, something that has not taken place since
       late May. A break of 1950 would be seen as an ominous
       development.
       __________________
       Marc Chandler
       Marc to Market
       www.marctomarket.com
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