Equity investors kept using the buy-dips trading strategy this past week as there was another long
downside shadow on the weekly candlestick registered. The sequence of higher lows remained in play, and
that points to the uptrend as the general direction. According to the weekly chart below, 55-bars Exponential Moving Average acted as
the support curve, lifting the index upwards. On the other hand, two concerns remained for the bulls.
First, the S&P 500 benchmark closed the previous week below the psychological round-figure mark of 3000
points. Second, the all-time high kept standing. Both factors could influence another wave of selling
pressure at least for the first half of the upcoming week. At the time of writing, futures pointed to a
lower open on Monday.
The long-term perspective is still positive though. The Bull-Bear trend indicator points to a wide
bullish surplus. Even the bearish rally noticed on August 24 did not force the indicator to cross the
zero line. Bollinger Bands %B remained above the 50% level, underlining the bullish phase of the trend.
However, buying the S&P 500 on the very top of the market would not be a good idea as bearish whipsaws
are possible. We’d suggest taking some profits and waiting for the local bottom to form before renewing
long positions.
DXY: Bearish
The U.S. dollar index went off the local top. The weekly chart below shows how important the upcoming
week will be for the graphical analysis. The bears had an attempt to continue the uptrend (red arrow)
but failed to hold mid-week gains as the DXY slipped back down. What’s more, the selling pressure was
accelerated and the greenback was sold off across the board. Main gainers were Euro, British Pound and
the Canadian dollar, while the Japanese yen did not add a negative sentiment to the index. As a result,
DXY dropped -0.51% to 98.33.
On the other hand, the support trendline limited further bearish action. It used to act as the support
line since the recent bullish swing started in June. Therefore, it would be a tough challenge for the
greenback bears to break the index through it. However, if they succeed, that will create a technical
precedent and a possible reversal pattern. Such a breakthrough might push the U.S. dollar index lower to
the horizontal support at 98.04, the top of the market noted on April 29. Shorting the overall index
might be reasonable, however, any particular currency pair should be analysed separately as all of them
have different sentiment currently, so traders should be selective.
GBP/USD: Extremely Bullish
The British Pound overperformed the rest of the FX market this past week. Of course, there were mainly
fundamental reasons for the bullish rally we saw last week, but the technical analysis was also
important. GBP/USD surged +2.56%, charting the strongest weekly gain since September 2017. The range was
also huge as the pair was trading near the lows at 1.2200 initially and then soared to 1.2700 high,
gaining incredible 500 pips in two days. What’s also important is that GBP/USD closed the week (1.2649)
above the bottom printed on December 10, 2018 (1.2588).
The weekly chart setup below shows a mixed bias. On the one hand, GBP/USD is still in the downtrend as
the rate remains below the 89-weeks Exponential Moving Average. The bulls did not even breach the
descending resistance line (dashed) despite the strong demand and dramatic reversal. However, MACD trend
indicator pointed out a strong buy-signal as its lines performed the bullish crossover, and the distance
before the zero levels is still huge, so the pair has a long path to go before the oversold conditions
were eliminated. The Relative Strength Index confirmed that suggestion as its value jumped above the 50%
threshold for the first time in six months. Given the speed of the bullish rally, the upside risk
remains.
We would suggest a bounce-back toward 1.2500 support before the bulls will renew the buying pressure.
The main reason for such a scenario is that the upside swing was too fast, and the market needs to
rebalance. Daily and intraday oscillators are extremely overbought, and they also need to reload before
the rally continues. Therefore, implementing the buy-dips trading strategy looks reasonable at this
point, while shorter timeframe analysis should indicate the best entry point for longs of GBP/USD this
week.
USD/JPY: Bullish
Another surprise was in the yen’s performance as it went against the general market. Japan's currency
weakened on the back of risk appetite seen in equities. USD/JPY gained strength despite the overall
weakness of the greenback versus other majors. Thanks to the weekly gain of +1.41%, which was the
largest appreciation of the pair in 14 months, USD/JPY charted the bullish engulfing pattern on the
weekly timeframe (see the screenshot below). Although the bulls did not breach the resistance level at
108.50 with the first attempt, another test looks imminent. The medium-term analysis points to a median
magnetic line as the strategic target for the bulls, so the exchange rate of 112.00 yen per dollar would
not surprise currency traders shortly. The only concern (and the nearest barrier) is the horizontal
static line at 109.32, and the bulls have to gain power and breach it if they are really intended to
keep the momentum and continue the uptrend.
The buy-dips strategy is also applicable here as there is no trend with one-way price action. Pivot
points to consider new entries are placed at 108.00 and 107.80, but volatile market conditions could
lead to even a deeper pullback toward 107.50 support. Nevertheless, forex traders should monitor
intraday action and performance of U.S. stock indices to find attractive entry levels. If equities kept
playing the same scenario of bouncing back down before charting a bullish rally, USD/JPY would reflect
the action. It’s also worth having a look at the GBP/JPY cross-rate, which soared almost 700 pips last
week.
USD/CAD: Bearish
The loonie gained strength, finally. It’s been a while since USD/CAD was trying to break through the
resistance range of 1.3300/50, and every new bullish attempt was leading to short-term pullbacks. The
past trading week was different as the bears took the markets under control, pushing the pair toward
1.3200 support. What’s more, thanks to the weekend gap, the weekly candlestick was nothing but bearish
engulfing. Nearest targets for the downtrend are 1.3171 (already tested last Friday) and 1.30286 (the
bottom printed on July 12). The technical sentiment is bearish with average directional index shifting
the surplus to negative and the mainline heading toward the threshold. The relative strength index is
continuously bearish as well. What the bears need is a strong rally south to eliminate defensive
barriers of the bulls and continue the downtrend. The price action of WTI Crude Oil is supportive of the
Loonie as the recent development of the Middle East escalation could lead to a supply shortage. WTI
Crude surged almost 4% last week.
Max Vasilyev
One of 6ixmarkets's clients. It was on this resource that he was able to earn the first
$50,000.
He lives in Moscow.