Friday, March 19, 2010

The Dollar Index: The Move Isn't Done

I will keep this brief as my rational for the new found strength in the Dollar Index is more observational than "scientific". Some things you just can't back test or measure in a methodical fashion or I just haven't figured out how to do it.

On January 19, 2010, I wrote "Expecting The Dollar Index To Rise For 2010", and I based this statement on the fact that 1) the Dollar Index had bottomed back in early, 2008; and 2) the Dollar Index was actually in a secular bull trend having found support in 2009 at those 2008 lows. Figure 1 is a weekly chart of the Dollar Index showing the close over the 3 key pivot points which is bullish.

Figure 1. Dollar Index

Not surprisingly, the equity market embarked on its most significant pullback in 6 months at a time that the Dollar Index moved higher. Conversely, the Dollar Index pulled back from its February highs at the time the equity markets were just starting to go on a month long tear.

So that is our baseline. Why is the Dollar going up now? My guess - and this is only a guess - is that the risk trade has ended for now and it will be a rotation back to safe haven assets. More specifically and from the things that I watch everyday, the Dollar Index is bouncing because investor sentiment had gotten relatively bearish on the Dollar Index. This can be seen in figure 2 a daily chart of the Power Shares DB US Dollar Bull (symbol: UUP); this is an ETF that mirrors the price moves of the Dollar Index. The indicator in the lower panel is the MarketVane Bullish Consensus for the Dollar Index, and over the past 2 days it hit an extreme (relative) low. Investor sentiment had turned bearish (relatively so) and this is a bull signal.

Figure 2. Dollar Index/ daily

Now this is the anecdotal part: 1) not all extremes in investor sentiment lead to reversals; but 2) observationally across a multitude of assets and market environments, I can tell you that the first extreme (bear) reading in investor sentiment after a strong move off the bottom is bought.

The Dollar Index is in a long term secular up trend. The first bearish sentiment reading within that up trend is a buy signal. We can ascribe all sorts of reasons why the Dollar is going higher. From this vantage point, this is just normal price movements within a longer term uptrend.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I hadn't looked at UUP for a while, but you are so right: if it moves higher here (and holds), the $US is definitely the one to buy. Thanks for the heads u(u)p.

Anonymous said...

I've had an upside target on UUP of 24.80 - 25.04 for some time....Those mini bull flags should help give it that final push. We shall see...

Fester said...

On the cusp of breakout here...could UUP go to $27 again?