The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the performance of the US Dollar against six major currencies, dives lower and trades near 107.50 at the time of writing on Wednesday ahead of the US Purchase Managers Index (PMI) releases from both S&P Global and the Institute for Supply Management (ISM). Tensions in markets over the United States (US) President Donald Trump’s tariffs are unwinding now that levies on Mexico and Canada slapped over the weekend have been paused. This coincides with some US Dollar (USD) risk premium easing this Wednesday while Chinese traders head back to their desks after the Chinese New Year, with a surge in trading volumes. As mentioned above, the economic data calendar shows a bulk of releases on Wednesday. In Europe, the aggregate , German, French, and Spanish PMI data have already been released earlier in the day, with final readings for January falling roughly in line to below their preliminary readings. In the US, S&P Global is set to release its reading in the early American session, with the ISM data specifically for the Services sector set to be issued just minutes thereafter. Daily digest market movers: Data takes over from tariffs
- Services PMI is expected to tick up to 54.3 from 54.1 in December.
- The Prices Paid component has no forecast and was at 64.4 in the previous release.
US Dollar Index Technical Analysis: Safe haven excludes DollarThe US (DXY) extends correction and dives lower on Wednesday. Traders and investors are heading to safe havens like Gold and the Swiss Franc (CHF). For once, the Greenback is not part of the rescue party, as risk-premium gained at the beginning of the week after President Trump slapped Mexico and Canada with tariffs over the weekend is starting to ease, no longer supporting an elevated US Dollar. On the upside, the first barrier at 109.30 (July 14, 2022, high and rising trendline) was briefly surpassed but did not hold on Monday. Once that level is reclaimed, the next level to hit before advancing further remains at 110.79 (September 7, 2022, high). On the downside, the October 3, 2023, high at 107.35 acts is trying to hold support and withstand the selling pressure this Wednesday. For now, that looks to be holding, though the Relative Strength Index (RSI) still has some room for the downside. Hence, look for 106.52 or even 105.89 as better levels. (Click on image to enlarge)US Dollar Whipsaws With China Retaliating Against Trump And Tariffs On Canada And Mexico Delayed US Dollar Adds To Gains With Tariff Talk And PCE As Main Drivers Gold At Fresh All-Time Highs Ahead Of US PCE