Home / Metal News / US Dollar Index Hits 7-Month High, Hindering Any Bounce for Metals

US Dollar Index Hits 7-Month High, Hindering Any Bounce for Metals

iconNov 12, 2015 09:31
Source:SMM
Last Wednesday, the Federal Reserve said that a December interest rate increase is still on the table.

by Raul de Frutos on 

Last Wednesday, the Federal Reserve said that a December interest rate increase is still on the table. On top of that on Friday, data showed an addition of 271,000 jobs were created in October, with the unemployment rate dropping to 5%, beating expectations.

The good news greatly increased chances for a December rate hike. As a result, bond yields surged and the dollar appreciated against all currencies. The dollar index made a bullish move and is now at a seven-month high, breaking above resistance levels. The move suggests a continuation of the dollar’s bull market.

Dollar Index hitting 7-month high

The US dollar Index hits a seven-month high. Source: MetalMiner analysis of @StockCharts.com data.

Dollar Up, Metals Down

A rising dollar is something we’ve covered in previous articles. One of the side effects of a strong dollar is lower commodity prices since commodities are priced in US dollars and thus are negatively correlated to dollar fluctuations.

Industrial metals are commodities and a strong dollar has a depressing effect on prices. In the next chart we can see the dollar index versus the Industrial Metals exchange-traded fund. Notice how the dollar started to rise in mid-October, making industrial metals fall to multiyear lows.

  • Dollar Index (in green) vs Industrial Metals ETF (in blue)

  • US dollar index (in green) vs. the Industrial Metals ETF (in blue). Source: MetalMiner analysis of @StockCharts.com data.

What This Means For Metal Buyers

On top of weak Chinese demand, we have a rising dollar. This is bad news for metal producers and  good news for metal buyers. For metal prices, we expected, and we still expect, more downward movement ahead.


Commodities
Exchange Traded Funds
Global Trade
Macroeconomics
Supply & Demand

For queries, please contact Michael Jiang at michaeljiang@smm.cn

For more information on how to access our research reports, please email service.en@smm.cn

Related news

SMM Events & Webinars

All