The
Dollar, Oil and Airlines: A Nice Relationship Until The
Government Steps In
By Rick Pendergraft
Over the last
month, the intertwined relationships of the markets have
been wacky to say the least. It was on July 15 that the SEC
announced their protection plan for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac
and 17 banks and brokerage firms.
The move by the SEC totally disrupted the natural ebb and
flow of the market. Financial stocks bottomed (for now) on
July 15. This makes sense since the government stepped in
to protect their offspring (the government sponsored
entities FNM and FRE). But the next part doesn’t really
make sense. Oil peaked on July 15. What does the U.S.
government bailing out financial institutions have to do
with the oil market?
I should warn you now that the rest of this article is
littered with charts, but I find that the charts can tell
the story better than the written word.
Let’s start with the chart of the dollar. First, on a daily
chart the dollar looks like it is in the midst of a major
breakout, but before you uncork that bottle of champagne to
celebrate the end of the declining dollar, look at the
weekly chart below. The trend line connecting the highs of
the past four years is still in place and the dollar has yet
to move above some very significant resistance in the way of
the 100-week and 200-week moving averages. And even if the
dollar goes on a tear, it might not be a good thing. Take a
look at Lynn Carpenter’s article on
the relationship between equities and currencies.

This rally in the dollar has dramatic effects on oil, and
why not, after all it was the falling dollar that helped
lift oil to record levels over the past few years. Look at
the chart of oil below and you see the incredible climb from
$70 to $145 in less than a year.
However, look at the 200-day moving average there at the
$110 mark. Now look back at the high in March and the low
in May. That’s right they are right at the $110 mark. I
look for this triple level of support to provide a bounce in
oil over the next few weeks.

Now it stands to reason that if oil is falling, then
airlines should be rallying. That is just what the AMEX
Airline Index has done over the last month. Look at the
daily chart below and you can see that the XAL doubled from
July 15 to August 15. It would be an incredible move for a
stock to double in a month, but for an index to double in a
month is almost unheard of.

The point of all this is that the SEC stepped in to protect
the financial sector by issuing a directive not allowing
naked short selling (an illegal practice) on Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac and 17 other financial stocks. By interfering
with a so-called free market, the SEC manufactured a rally
in financial stocks, a rally in the dollar, a pullback in
oil and gold, and a rally in airlines stocks.
This just goes to show you how intertwined all the different
markets are and how one government intervention has ripple
effects across many markets.
All this being said, it looks like the dollar has too much
resistance to get through in the near term and oil has too
much support at $110 to blast right through this level at
this point. Look for a pullback in the dollar and a rally
in oil over the next few weeks. This should of course send
airlines back down a little as a result.
Good luck and good trading,
Rick
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