US Dollar On The Backfoot Ahead Of Michigan Reading For March

  • The Greenback back in a weekly loss ahead of the US trading session on Friday. 
  • Headline risk persists with headlines on the government shutdown and tariff headwinds.
  • The US Dollar Index has been limited by the 104.00 hurdle and looks to be closing off the week in a negative tone.

The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the performance of the US Dollar (USD) against six major currencies, dips lower again on Friday after a few headlines on tariffs and the US spending bill. The index, which has been limited below the 104.00 hurdle this week, hasn’t moved that much despite rumors of a possible ceasefire deal by Ukraine, the first steps in the German spending plan voting and retaliations from Canada and Europe on US tariffs.

On the economic data front, the final releases are expected later this Friday. The University of Michigan will publish its preliminary consumer sentiment reading for March and the 5-year inflation expectation. 
 

Daily digest market movers: WTO to look into tariffs

  • Gold as a safe haven asset has breached the $3,000 mark this Friday in a recession-feared-induced rally where traders are much concerned about economic growth and the tariffs outlook, with reciprocal levies coming into effect in April. 
  • A government shutdown looks to be avoided after Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is said to back the House-passed funding measure. 
  • The World Trade Organisation (WTO) has been requested by Canada to look into the possibility US President Donald Trump's tariffs are illegal, Bloomberg reports. 
  • At 14:00 GMT, the University of Michigan will release its preliminary reading for March:
    • The US Consumer Sentiment Index is expected to decline by 63.1, coming from 64.7.
    • The US 5-year Consumer Inflation Expectation has no forecast and was at 3.5% in the final February reading. 
  • Equities are making another attempt to brush off the negative tone for this week. All indices are up over 0.50% across Europe and in the US. 
  • The CME Fedwatch Tool projects a 97.0% chance for no interest rate changes in the upcoming Fed meeting on March 19. The chances of a rate cut at the May 7 meeting stand at 32.8% and 78.5% at June’s meeting.
  • The US 10-year yield trades around 4.306%, off its near five-month low of 4.10% printed on March 4 and after hitting a five-day high on Thursday. 
     

US Dollar Index Technical Analysis: Hard to read

The US Dollar Index (DXY) shows bearish fatigue after its steep downward correction last week. Volatility in its price action completely eroded, and even the DXY stabilizes on Friday after recovering initial weekly losses. While tensions build-up ahead of reciprocal tariffs taking effect in April, it looks like the US Dollar Index might be on the verge of paring back some of the previous week’s losses when assessing the direction into next week. 

Upside risk is a rejection at 104.00 that could result in more downturn. If bulls can avoid that, look for a large sprint higher towards the 105.00 round level, with the 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at 105.02. Once broken through that zone, a string of pivotal levels, such as 105.53 and 105.89, will present as caps. 

On the downside, the 103.00 round level could be considered a bearish target in case US yields roll off again, with even 101.90 not unthinkable if markets further capitulate on their long-term US Dollar holdings. 

(Click on image to enlarge)

US Dollar Index: Daily Chart

US Dollar Index: Daily Chart


More By This Author:

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