The US Dollar (USD) rolls through markets on Tuesday after President-elect Donald Trump communicated on his social media channel that his government will issue an additional 25% tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico, with an additional 10% to the 60% already announced during his election campaign on Chinese goods. Markets are not doing well with this communication, as are printing red numbers across the board and the globe while US bond prices are dropping (yields are soaring). The will show some housing data on Tuesday. With the Housing Price Index for September and the New Home Sales data for October, markets will be able to see if the housing market in the US is cooling down as the last piece that was driving inflation. At the end of the day, the (Fed) publishes the Minutes of its November 7 meeting.
Daily digest market movers: US Housing data ahead
US Dollar Index Technical Analysis: Mixed bag (DXY) has difficulties to thrive on the back of the comments from President-elect Donald Trump imposing even more tariffs on neighbours Canada, Mexico, and the usual suspect China. The weaker Canadian Dollar (CAD) component is being offset by a stronger Euro (EUR) and Swedish Krona (SEK). The DXY does not really reflect what is actually taking place in the targeted countries. Hence, the muted reaction in the US Dollar Index does not seem to break out in a way on the back of this tariff announcement. The fresh two-year high at 108.07 seen on Friday is the first level to beat. Further up, the 109.00 big figure level is the next one in line. The support from October 2023 at 109.36 is certainly a level to watch out for on the topside. Support comes in around 106.52, the double top from May. A touch lower, the pivotal 105.53 (April 11 high) should avoid any downturns towards 104.00. Should the DXY fall all the way towards 104.00, the big figure and the 200-day Simple Moving Average at 103.98 should catch any falling knife formation. (Click on image to enlarge)US Dollar Index: Daily ChartMore By This Author:US Dollar Surges To Two-Year High As Eurozone PMIs Disappoint US Dollar Flattens After Fed’s Williams Delivers Dovish Comments US Dollar Ticks Up As Markets Brace For Nvidia Earnings