Fundamental Forecast for Dollar:Â Neutral
- General market conditions have grown extremely quiet with the equity VIX and EURUSD’s EVZ hitting approximate 2-year low
- Top event risk this week includes the CPI update, FOMC minutes, Fed speech and TIC capital flows report
- See our 3Q forecasts for the US Dollar and market benchmarks on the DailyFX Trading Guides page
Conditions are extraordinarily quiet across the financial market, and the Dollar is certainly not escaping the lethargy. While the USDollar’s activity level – measure by the Average True Range (ATR) – is higher than many of its FX and alternative asset peers, it has been tethered to a constricted range. There are two general themes that are consistently market-moving for the Greenback: risk trends and shifting rate speculation. Neither faces the type of event risk that can carry the heft and scope to systemically change the currency’s bearings, but there is potential for volatility on the latter topic amide inflation data and central bank updates.
Through the past week, the Dollar lost ground versus all majors with the exception of the British Pound (sunk by fading growth expectations amid the post-Brexit watch). Yet, despite the near uniformity, there wasn’t much desperation behind the move. Most of its losses were held to less than 0.75 percent. There was little high-profile event risk this past week to overcome the dampened activity levels felt in the broader financial markets.
To give a sense of how remarkably quiet conditions are, we’ve seen the equities-based VIX drop to a two-year low on seven-week march lower. The S&P 500’s 20-day (equivalent to one trading month) average daily range has shrunk to 0.6 percent of current price – which we have only seen once outside of holidays in the past few decades. And the CBOE’s EUR/USD volatility index has slipped to levels not seen since October 2014. It is quiet. Looking ahead, there is little of the concentrated and scheduled event risk that we have seen change the tone of the markets. Those events are further out such as the Jackson Hole Symposium (the following week), the G20 meeting (the week after that) or the start of the next round of important central bank meetings (throughout September).