Currency trading markets sunk the US dollar for the second consecutive trading day, as a broad improvement in risk aversion allowed speculators to re-enter previously profitable dollar short positions. The effects were particularly pronounced against high-flying carry trade currencies, with the Australian dollar up 0.6 percent and the
US Producer Price Index and Advance Retail Sales reports printed roughly at consensus forecasts, and a subsequently unchanged outlook for inflation and consumer spending left the dollar relatively stable through morning
The Dow initially rallied 63 points soon after the morning open, but flagging bullish interest dragged the index to a +16 points just an hour ahead of the close. The S&P 500 showed similar price action and remained 3 points up to 1,484 through time of writing. Yet modest gains did not spread to the recently volatile NASDAQ Composite index. Tech stocks underperformed the broader market and pushed the NASDAQ 0.3 percent lower to 2,665.
US Treasury Market trading was similarly muted, and the yield on the 2-Year Treasury note rose a single basis point to 3.55 percent. The 10-year Note was likewise 1 basis point higher to 4.27 percent, while the December Fed Funds Futures contract gained 1.5 basis points in implied yield to 4.37 percent. Futures traders now price in an approximate 72 percent chance that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates by 25 basis points at its upcoming meeting. All else remaining equal, expectations for falling US yields will keep the US dollar offered through upcoming forex trade.
Written by David Rodríguez, Currency Analyst for DailyFX.com