By David Song, Currency Analyst 26 March 2013 09:45 GMT
Trading the News: U.S. Consumer Confidence
As the EURUSD struggles to hold above the 200-Day SMA (1.2874), the pair could be poised to give back the rebound from back in November (1.2659), and the euro-dollar may steady work its way back towards 1.2640-50 – the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement from the 2009 high to the 2010 low – as it searches for support. At the same time, the EURUSD may be limited to the upside as long as the relative strength index remains capped by the 46 figure, and we may see the longer-term bearish flag pattern continue to play out amid the deviation in the policy outlook. How To Trade This Event Risk Expectations for a drop in sentiment casts a bearish outlook for the reserve currency, but a positive development may set the stage for a long U.S. dollar trade as it raises the prospects for future growth. Therefore, if the survey exceeds market expectations, we will need to see a red, five-minute candle following the release to generate a sell entry on two-lots of EURUSD. Once these conditions are fulfilled, we will set the initial stop at the nearby swing high or a reasonable distance from the entry, and this risk will generate our first target. The second objective will be based on discretion, and we will move the stop on the second lot to cost once the first trade hits its mark in an effort to lock-in our gains. On the other hand, we may see sticky prices along with the ongoing weakness in the real economy drag on household sentiment, and a dismal print may weaken the dollar as it raises the Fed’s scope to expand the balance sheet further. In turn, if the survey slips to 67.5 or lower in March, we will implement the same setup for a long euro-dollar trade as the short position laid out above, just in reverse. Impact that the Consumer Confidence survey has had on USD during the last month Pips Change (1 Hour post event ) Pips Change (End of Day post event) January 2013 U.S. Consumer Confidence
The gauge for U.S. household sentiment jumped to 69.6 from a revised 58.4 in January to mark the biggest advance since November 2011, while inflation expectations for the next 12 months slipped to an annualized 5.5%, posting the slowest rate of growth since July. The stronger-than-expected print propped up the greenback, with the EURUSD slipping below the 1.3050 figure, but we saw the reserve currency consolidate during the North American trade as the pair ended the day at 1.3061. --- Written by David Song, Currency Analyst To contact David, e-mail dsong@dailyfx.com. Follow me on Twitter at @DavidJSong To be added to David's e-mail distribution list, please follow this link. New to FX? Watch this Video Questions? Comments? Join us in the DailyFX Forum Click Here to Download the DailyFX News Notifier DailyFX provides forex news and technical analysis on the trends that influence the global currency markets.
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