USD: Rates lifting the dollar
The dollar has continued to build bullish momentum, drawing strength from the repricing in Federal Reserve rate expectations now that risk sentiment seems to stabilise as a bi-partisan deal on the debt ceiling looks more feasible. Republicans are demanding stricter work requirements for social safety net programmes, a point the most liberal branches of the Democratic parties have firmly opposed. It seems, however, that President Biden may ultimately budge on this point, and House Speaker McCarthy said yesterday that an “agreement in principle” may be ready by this weekend.
The market reaction to the optimistic turn in the US debt ceiling story seems to be perfectly fitting a bullish dollar narrative as equities have stabilised, but failed to show a substantial rebound (the Dow Jones remains below the levels it was trading at 10 days ago). The clearest reaction has been once again in the bond market, with yet another bearish session for Treasuries. 10-year yields pressed above the 3.60% mark, the highest since March; 2-year USD swaps have risen to 4.45%, highest since mid-April. Against this market backdrop, a stronger dollar across the board is a natural reaction in FX.
The large move in rates was the consequence of markets seeing a potential debt-ceiling deal as a positive development for the US economy, but there were other contributing factors at play: initial jobless claims fell more than expected yesterday, and Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) member Lorie Logan hinted that another hike is still possible given sticky inflationary pressures. The re-pricing in Fed rate expectations has been substantial. Only a week ago, markets were pricing in no chances of a rate hike in June and 75bp of cuts in December. Now, the Fed Funds Future curve embeds a 33% implied probability of a 25bp hike in June, and around 50bp of cuts by December.
It's hard to buck the dollar's bullish momentum now, as we also think some substantial squeezing of short USD positions can be behind the move. Today. We’ll hear from Fed Chair Jerome Powell and he will probably have some interest in keeping a hawkish rhetoric alive, ultimately adding a bit more pressure on bonds and support to the dollar. A US debt-ceiling deal may be announced, but that appears to be mostly priced in by now.
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We argue that the sustainability of this kind of dollar trend strongly relies on hard data confirming price pressure remain elevated and the US economic outlook stable. This may be a story for the near-term, where the dollar can still find some support, but we see the second half of the year as the period where evidence of sharply slowing US economic activity will force large cuts by the Fed and cause a rapid dollar depreciation.
Francesco Pesole
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