The US Dollar is flat on the day as the DXY Index is barely holding onto its daily 21-EMA as support. Following the release of the September FOMC meeting minutes, market participants have become more sensitive to incoming inflation data, as policymakers made clear that many believed low inflation was a feature, not a bug, of modern advanced economies. With two ‘high’ importance US economic releases on the calendar today, including the September US CPI report, there is an opportunity for the greenback to stem its recent losses.

According to a Bloomberg News survey, US consumer prices were marginally higher on a monthly-basis in September, due in at +0.6% from +0.4% (m/m) and +2.3% from +1.9% (y/y). The core readings should be similar, at +0.2% unch (m/m), and at +1.8% from +1.7% (y/y).

These figures agregately have started to push back towards the Fed’s medium-term target, and would represent removing the biggest obstacle to the Fed following through on its plan to raise rates one more time before the year is over (even if some of the upside pressure is due to supply chain issues following Hurricanes Harvey and Irma). Any impact on the US Dollar will be vis-à-vis the glide path pricing channel.

Consumption is the most important part of the US economy, generating nearly 70% of the headline GDP figure. The best monthly insight we have into consumption trends in the US might arguably be the Advance Retail Sales report. In September, consumption increased, according to a Bloomberg News survey, with the headline Advance Retail Sales set to increase by +1.7% (m/m). The Retail Sales Control Group, the input used to calculate GDP, is due in at +0.4% from -0.2% (m/m).

Chart 1: Inverse USD/CHF, Inverse USD/JPY, Gold, & US Treasury 10-year Yield Hourly Timeframe (September to October 2017)

US Dollar, Hanging on by a Thread, Turns to CPI & Retail Sales

Accordingly, around the data and into next week, following the loss of the DXY Index’s bullish posture, selection for long USD exposure needs to be discriminatory until the DXY offers a clearer signal for a broad US Dollar bias. The most appealing places right now might be USD/JPY and USD/CHF, given these pairs’ sensitivity to US interest rates and their relationship to risk dynamics. Throughout September and October, Gold, US yields, USD/CHF, and USD/JPY have traded synchronously, and this should for the foreseeable future.

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