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USD: Debt ceiling jitters raise upside potential in near term
The dollar enters a new week with a broadly unchanged set of sharply contrasting factors which saw it test the lows, first, and then rebound quite sharply in a rather eventful month of May. The two main opposing forces at the moment are the declining short-term US rates (as more Federal Reserve rate cuts are priced in) and the debt-ceiling impasse in Washington. The first force will be driven by data and Fedspeak today; the second by negotiations which should resume on Tuesday.
When it comes to data, the strong jobs figures for April were followed by inflation figures that did offer some tentative signs of cooling-off in service inflation, below-consensus PPI, and higher-than-expected jobless claims ( a signal that lay-offs are surging). This week, we have retail sales and industrial production as the highlights. Our US economist thinks that retail sales will probably get a lift from the robust auto sales numbers for April, while industrial production will be held back by the fact that manufacturing surveys continue to point to falling production with lower energy prices limiting the upside for oil and gas extraction. Some specific focus will inevitably be on the new jobless claims report. Today, Empire manufacturing and TIC data are on the calendar.
The pricing for the December contract in the Fed funds futures market continues to oscillate between 65bp and 75bp of cuts. Of all data this week, jobless claims may be the bit that could move rate expectations more than the rest, but expect some sensitivity to Fed speakers as well. Today alone we’ll hear from FOMC members Raphael Bostic, Austan Goolsbee, Neel Kashkari and Lisa Cook. The Fedspeak calendar peaks with a speech by Chair Jay Powell on Friday.
Some pushback against rate cut expectations may well be on the cards this week, and while this could offer the dollar some support, it’s not the rate side that seems likely to be a sustainable positive driver for the dollar. Two-year dollar swap rates are still close to the lows, around 20bp above the key psychological 4.00% mark, and markets have shown a strong tendency to price in rate cuts quite aggressively.
What is really keeping the dollar afloat at this stage is the debt-ceiling impasse in Washington, in our view. Negotiations between President Biden and congressional leaders should resume on Tuesday, but unless we see truly encouraging progress, investors’ fears may keep growing. Barring positive news on this end, we think the balance of risks remains tilted to the upside for the dollar for now, which should see safe-haven flows as risk sentiment stays subdued. The rebound in DXY could extend to the 103.50/104.00 area in the coming days.
Francesco Pesole
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