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There's no way to deny the importance of today's surge in the U.S. Dollar
index. After staging a surprise rally in the first half of 2005, the Greenback
has been struggling for over four months at the 90 level, but today's surge
through 91 suggests that battle with that resistance has been won by the Dollar
bulls, especially if the index can close above that level.
In the 3-year chart of the Dollar index below, one can easily see the resistance
that the 88-90 level has posed, resistance that formed through the large portion
of 2004:

I myself even wrote a commentary in July titled "Commodity
Currencies to be Less Exciting in Second Half" based in part on this
very visible level of resistance; in retrospect, I should have suggested
that currencies would be less than inspiring for most of the 2nd half
since today's action suggests another up-leg for the Dollar is likely upon
us.
Typically, a technical breakout like this one would lead me to believe that
we'd see that asset spurt quickly higher, then perhaps pullback to the breakout
level, consolidating the quick surge in preparation for a more sustained move
higher. This year, however, has been murder on breakout traders, with such
spikes often acting as points of exhaustion so a furious, ultra-short term
move into the mid-90's may not materialize. However, the longer-term plus for
Dollar bulls is that the very resistance level that posed such a challenge
recently should now act as powerful support, acting to contain any pullbacks
in our currency from here.
Upon its first failure at the 90 level this Summer, the most vociferous Dollar
perma-bears were quick to declare the Dollar's "counter-rally" dead based on
the charts (though most aren't technicians, they'll point to charts as evidence
when an obvious pattern emerges that they feel verifies their thinking). This
move, however, will be much harder to explain away based on the charts. I also
suspect that it's going to become increasingly difficult for the most vocal
anti-Dollar extremists to sell their "Dollar collapse' and "end of American
empire' nonsense as we head into 2006.
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