US stock advanced on Thursday and recovered some ground after registering minimal losses on Wednesday, as the falling US 10-year Treasury yield made stocks relatively attractive. During the testimony before the House Financial Services Committee on Monetary Policy and the State of the Economy, FOMC Chairman Jerome Powell said that a big part of inflation wouldn’t be affected by the Fed’s tools. Moreover, Fed Governor Michelle Bowman also said that she supports another 75 basis points interest rates hike in July. On the economic data side, the US manufacturing index dropped to 52.4 in June, which is an almost two-year low. Meanwhile, the S&P Global Services PMI fell to 51.6 from 53.4 in May, missing the market’s expectations and showing that contractions in output and new orders weighed heavily on the headline figure.
The benchmarks, S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average both rose on Thursday as the slide witnessed in US 10-year Treasury yield provided some support to the US equities market despite the disappointing PMI data. S&P 500 was up 1.0% daily, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average also advanced with a 0.6% gain for the day. Seven out of eleven sectors stayed in positive territory as the utilities and health care sectors are the best performing among all groups, rising 2.35% and 2.22%, respectively. The Nasdaq 100 climbed the most with a 1.5% gain on Thursday and the MSCI World index declined 0.5%. The market focus now remains on overheating inflation and potential recessions among major economies.
Main Pairs Movement
The US dollar advanced on Thursday, rebounding from a weekly low that touched on Wednesday and extending its rally toward the 104.7 area amid risk-off market sentiment. The DXY index started to see fresh buying and reached a daily high above 104.7 level in the early European session, but then lost its bullish traction to surrender some of its daily gains. The safe-haven greenback continued to find demand amid escalating fears about a global recession, as the US PMI data came in weaker than expected and fueled recession-related concerns.
GBP/USD edged lower with a 0.08% loss on Thursday amid bullish momentum witnessed in the US dollar across the board. The better-than-expected UK PMI prints for June have helped the cable to find some demand and recovered most of its intra-day losses. The cable touched a daily low below 1.218 level in the early European session, now trading at 1.226 at the time of writing. Meanwhile, EUR/USD slumped to a daily low below the 1.049 mark but then rebounded modestly to offset some of its intraday losses. The pair was down almost 0.44% for the day.
Gold declined and touched a daily low near $1823 during the American session, as the broad US dollar strength continued to exert bearish pressure on the precious metal. Meanwhile, WTI oil dropped to a near six-week low amid the recession fears.
Technical Analysis
EURUSD (4-Hour Chart)
After three days of gains, EURUSD entered a sharp correction on Thursday as risk-off sentiment returned across global markets. Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s testament on Wednesday added concerns of a recession in the U.S.. Chairman Powell points out the possibility of an interest rate-induced recession as the central bank aims to aggressively pull back inflation. On the other hand, recession in the European zone could be well underway as PMI from Germany drops to a multi-year low of 52, indicating stalling demand and drastic slow down of the economy. The EU leaders’ summit will reconvene on Friday.
On the technical side, EURUSD continues to face strong resistance at our previously estimated level of around 1.05483. The new level of support could form around the 1.049 price region, but there are no technical indications of it yet. RSI for the pair sits at 44.42, as of writing. On the four-hour chart, EURUSD currently trades below its 50, 100, and 200-day SMA.
Resistance: 1.05483, 1.06315
Support: 1.0382
GBPUSD (4-Hour Chart)
GBPUSD continued to trade lower after a slight pull back from the previous trading day. British PMI contracted to 53.4, below estimates of 52.7. Risk-off sentiment has further helped the U.S. Dollar rise against the British Pound. On the economic docket, the British retail sales and the American existing home sales data are slated to release during the European trading session and American trading session, respectively.
On the technical side, GBPUSD remains depressed under our previously estimated resistance level of 1.239. Near-term support for Cable remains at 1.2173. RSI for the pair sits at 48.18, as of writing. On the four-hour chart, GBPUSD currently trades above its 50-day SMA, but below its 100 and 200-day SMA.
Resistance: 1.25944, 1.239
Support: 1.2173, 1.20824
USDJPY (4-Hour Chart)
USDJPY continues to drop for the second straight day. The risk-off sentiment has driven flows from the U.S. Dollar to a more supportive monetary environment for the Japanese Yen. With the U.S. benchmark 10-year Treasury yield falling back towards 3%, market participants the Dollar is losing steam amidst recent rallies. Some analysts are predicting that a further depreciation of the Japanese Yen could push the BoJ to intervene in monetary supply, however, no indication of such actions has been found yet.
On the technical side, USDJPY faced strong selling pressure at around the 136.6 price region. Near-term support for USDJPY sits at 133.84 and 131.81. RSI for the pair has resumed to normal territory and is sitting at 60.99, as of writing. On the four-hour chart, USDJPY currently trades above its 50, 100, and 200-day SMA.
Resistance: 136.57
Support: 133.84, 131.81
Economic Data
Currency | Data | Time (GMT + 8) | Forecast |
NZD | New Zealand—Maori New Year’s Holiday | All Day | – |
GBP | Retail Sales (May) | 14:00 | -0.7% |
EUR | German IFO Business Climate Index (Jun) | 16:00 | 92.9 |
EUR | EU Leaders Summit | 18:00 | – |
USD | New Home Sales (May) | 22:00 | 588K |