USD, EUR, GBP Analysis & News
- US Dollar[1] on a Firm Footing After Worst Monthly Drop in a Decade
- Australian Dollar[2] Struggling Ahead of RBA Decision
- Equities Bounce Despite US Fiscal Concerns
Currencies: After the largest monthly drop in a decade, the US Dollar is starting the month on the front foot in what is a seasonally favourable month. The greenback’s major counterparts has posted key rejections from big resistance areas, most notably, this has been seen in the Euro[3] and Sterling. As we highlighted in the latest CFTC speculative positioning data[4], US Dollar shorts is a crowded trade and thus risks are for a bout of short covering. Elsewhere, the Australian Dollar is among the notable underperformers ahead of the RBA rate decision as second wave COVID concerns prompt Australia to tighten lockdown measures.
GBP/USD Fell Short of 1.32
Source: Refinitiv
EUR/USD Rejects Trendline Stemming From GFC
Source: Refinitiv
Equities: Despite US lawmakers failing to agree on a COVID support package, equity markets are showing a modest bounce with European shares firmly in the green and being led by the tech sector. Similarly, the positive risk tone has spilled into the US with both the S&P[5] and Dow Jones[6] futures rising 0.5-0.7%. That said, investors will remain cautious throughout August, which is typically a more volatile month.
Commodities: Precious metals are slightly weaker as a stronger greenback halts the advance in both gold[7] and silver prices[8]. That said, the psychological 2000 level remains in sight for gold. However, with real yields continuing to trend lower, upside is likely to persist for the precious metals complex.
Looking ahead: While market focus will be on the