US Dollar (USD) slipped further overnight, in line with our earlier technical caution – that we were monitoring for signs that the USD rebound has turned its course. Indeed, the runup failed to break above 200dma and turned lower. Last at 99.80 levels, OCBC's FX analysts Frances Cheung and Christopher Wong note.
"Bullish momentum on daily chart faded while RSI fell. Support here at 99.80 (61.8% fibo), 99.10 levels (50% fibo retracement of May high to Sep low), 98.40 (38.2% fibo, 50 DMA). Resistance at 100.30/60 levels (200 DMA, 76.4% fibo). While absence of data and a non-committal, divisive Fed had allowed for USD squeeze to play out earlier this week, we had also said that at some point, USD bears can return with more conviction but that would require US data to come in softer (when data gets released), alongside Fed easing rates more decisively."
"Private sector data continued to reinforce the view that US labor market is softening – not only are job creations slowing, but layoffs are also beginning to increase. A report by Challenger, Gray & Christmas overnight saw job cuts surged 183% from Sep to 153k. YTD, companies have announced 1.1mio job cuts, the highest since Covid in 2020."
"In another set of jobs-related data, Indeed job postings and Indeed wage growth tracker have also been falling all year. Overall, we continue to expect USD to trade moderately softer amid Fed cuts underway while US data stays soft. USD has room to fall as long as broader risk-on sentiment stays intact and growth conditions outside US remains supported. Meanwhile, US government remains shut for 36 days – entering its longest stretch yet."