The US dollar is firmer against most major currencies today. The implications the Jamaica coalition in Germany is understood to be less likely to support a new vision for Europe in the aftermath of Brexit and the Great Financial Crisis.  Â
The euro’s low for the year was set at the very start near $1.0340. The first quarter or so was spent consolidating the gains in H2 16. It was trading below $1.06 in early April. However, the turn, in the form of a gap higher opening on April 24, as it becomes clear that the so-called populist-nationalist moment was not sweeping through Europe. This coincided with an inflation scare that sent the euro toward $1.15 by mid-year.Â
The euro has been consolidating its gains this month and appears to have carved out a topping pattern. Perhaps it has been helped by a seeming pattern of unsourced European official comments when the euro pokes through $1.20. Momentum traders are getting frustrated. It has become more expensive to short the dollar against the euro. The spread between US Libor and the one-year cross-currency basis swap is near -35 bp which is dearest the dollars have been here in H2 (the spread bottomed at the end of last year near -52 bp). The two-year interest rate differential is near 2.14% today, the highest since March. It has steadily climbed since the end of Q2 when it reached almost 1.90%.Â
The euro is making a new low for the month today. A convincing break of $1.18 would seem to confirm the topping pattern. The initial objective is near $1.16, though last month’s low was seen near $1.1660. A more aggressive target is near $1.1425, which corresponds to a 38.2% retracement of this year’s gains. There is an option for nearly 980 mln euros struck at $1.1825 that expires in NY today.Â
If the euro-dollar exchange rate has become a bit less sensitive to interest rate differentials, the dollar-yen rate remains very sensitive. The correlation (on percent change) over the past 60 sessions of US 10-year yield and dollar-yen remains historically high (~0.81). In fact, it does not look like it has been higher since at least 2000 than it is today. The 10-year US Treasury yield reached a high on September 20 near 2.29%. The dollar reached a high against the yen the next day near JPY112.70. Both have eased since, and today initial support in both markets is seen near yesterday’s lows (~JPY111.50 and 2.21%). There is a $660 mln option struck at JPY112 that expires in NY today. It may not be in play unless US yields pop. Â