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UPDATE
OF THE US DOLLAR INDEX
by David Petch
www.treasurechests.info
May 10, 2007
I thought it would be good
to post the USD action of late and why it is affecting other markets. I
will not be posting any other technical analysis reports for sometime.
Instead they will be research-related topics over the course of the next
4-6 months. An article I plan on releasing 3-4 weeks from now is titled
“Busy
Bee Bugaboo and Another Unsuspecting Agent of Doom”. As such, lets
get down to business.
The
lower 55 MA Bollinger band is still drifting well below the current
index value, suggestive a base has not yet been established. The upper
Bollinger bands are still declining, suggestive the USD has another 4-6
weeks of grinding higher before a top is put in place. Fibonacci time
extensions of various waves are shown near the lower portion of the
chart, with various Fib dates in late to early July. Short-term
stochastics have the %K beneath the %D, with another 1-2 weeks of upside
at a minimum before a brief downside move occurs (only to resume a
grinding upward trend to 83-83.5).
Figure
1

Blue
lines on the right hand side represent Fibonacci price projections of
downward trending wave price action projected off the subsequent
retracement. Red lines represent Fibonacci price retracements of the
move from early January 2005 until the late April 2006 top. Areas of
line overlap form Fib clusters, which indicate important Fib
support/resistance levels. There is strong resistance around 82.2-82.4,
so expect the sideways action to continue until this level is taken out.
One Babson channel contains the footprint of the USD from November 2005
till present, while another contains June 2006 till present. Notice how
both channels form a wedge that terminates anywhere from October 2007
until January 2008, depending upon how the channels are drawn. Based
upon this observation, the decline in the USD for this leg down could
continue for some time. Moving averages are in bearish alignment (200
day MA above the 155 day MA above the 50 day MA), with the 50 day MA
acting as support at 82.706. Full stochastics have the %K above the %D,
with at least 4-6 weeks of upside if the %K reaches the upper horizontal
channel line. This suggests “do not go short on the US dollar”. The
USD could continue to drop, but based upon the technical’s, there is a
possibility for the upward grinding action to continue.
Figure
2

The
weekly USD index is shown below, with Fibonacci time extensions of the
decline shown at the top of the chart and Fib price projections of the
decline projected off the April 2006 partial retracement on the right
hand side of the chart (denote din blue). The lower Bollinger bands are
in close proximity, suggestive the USD decline is set to continue after
the current retracement move is done. The upper trend line of the Babson
channel has proven to be strong resistance, with resistance around
83-83.5. A decline in the dollar below the 80 cent level would cause
severe economic losses for many global pension funds, governments and
investors, so it is highly unlikely that the dollar will NOT continue to
receive support from foreign countries. As such, expect the USD to
remain above 80 until late 2009/early 2010. Full stochastics have the %K
beneath the %D, indicating the downward trend in place since April 2006
is not yet over. A bottom is likely due between October 2007 and January
2008.
Figure
3

The
mid-term Elliott Wave chart of the USD index is shown below, with the
thought path denoted in green. The USD should retrace the decline to
somewhere between 83-83.5 before continuing the descent to the 80.3
level later this year. Wave [B] is taking the form of a flat, with wave
C forming a terminal impulse (3-3-3-3-3). There are numerous ways to
count waves 1,2 and 3 but for simplicity, I have kept the count only
labeled to the Minor Degree (pink). The upward move should continue
until mid to late June before declining slowly into October 2007 or
later.
Figure
4

The
long-term Elliott Wave chart of the USD index is shown below with the
thought path denoted in green. Wave C.(W).[A] and [c].W.(X).[A] were
elongated flats; elongated flats usually occur in triangles, which lead
to the hypothesis that a non-limiting triangle is currently developing.
After wave [B] completes, wave [C] should head back up higher to 83-84
over the course of mid to late 2008.
Figure
5

That
is all for today. I will update the S&P 500 Index tomorrow AM. Have
a great day.
David
Petch

© 2007 David Petch
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