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USD: Dollar can find more support
The most bullish expectations were probably for a debt ceiling deal to be on the table by today. This hasn’t been the case following a partial breakdown in negotiations on Friday, but a reconciliation and new staff-level talks over the weekend are keeping hopes alive that President Joe Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy will reach an agreement by the end of this week.
We discussed late last week how the dollar was enjoying a rather ideal mix of factors. Progress on debt ceiling talks was prompting some re-rating of US growth expectations, and paired with hawkish comments by some Fed officials, markets were shifting towards a more hawkish set of expectations for the near- and medium-term.
However, the volatility in the debt-limit sentiment also means volatility in rate expectations and the dollar. On Friday, the temporary setback in debt-ceiling negotiations saw markets fully unwind 10bp of tightening that had been priced in for June. This morning, the Fed funds future curve still embeds around 50bp of easing by year-end, considerably less than the 75bp from around 10 days ago. All this signals that markets remain cautiously optimistic about a deal, but Friday’s setback is probably preventing the Fed hawks' rhetoric from being passed through to the June pricing just yet.
With Biden and McCarthy expected to meet in person again today, headlines on the debt limit will likely drive most FX moves today. The US calendar is empty today, and may not offer major drivers for the market until Friday, when April PCE deflator (the Fed’s favourite inflation measure) numbers are released. Activity on the Fed side will be more interesting to monitor. The minutes (out on Wednesday) will be scanned closely for hints about a pause, while hawkish hints from the document could help rebuild some tightening expectations for June (should debt ceiling talks progress) and keep supporting the dollar. There are also some Fed speakers to watch this week, starting today, with James Bullard, Raphael Bostic and Mary Daly.
All in all, given the recent positive short-term reaction of the dollar to progress on debt-ceiling news and assuming the stalemate will finally be resolved some time this week, we could see the greenback staying supported, especially given that the lack of key data releases should not particularly challenge another hawkish repricing of Fed expectations. A key risk would only come in the form of particularly dovish FOMC minutes, although recent comments by FOMC members are pointing in the opposite direction. We still think that the Fed has already hit the peak, and our US economist expects as much as 100bp of cuts in late 2023 as the economic outlook deteriorates. With this in mind, we expect any dollar resilience to prove unsustainable beyond the short term.
Francesco Pesole
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