USD: Yellen is the new Powell
As discussed in yesterday’s FX daily, the Federal Reserve’s unclear communication may have set the stage for a dollar decline by leaving market pricing of rate expectations strictly tied to news on the banking crisis and the regional bank turmoil which is still looking unresolved in the US. At the same time, we highlighted how a further depreciation in the greenback is unlikely to look like a straight line: in an environment where news flies and changes rapidly, corrections – even of large magnitudes – are the norm.
The most obvious symptom of how the Fed has lost its grip on the market is US Treasury secretary Janet Yellen “stealing” Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s spotlight as a market driver. This happened blatantly on Wednesday when a dovish Fed hike was out-shadowed by Yellen’s backtracking on a “blanket” bank deposit insurance. Yesterday, she offered some reassurance to markets in that sense, saying: “Certainly, we would be prepared to take additional actions if warranted”. This was enough to offer some relief to market concerns on the US regional banking troubles and take some pressure off rate cut speculation and off the dollar. And it is another testament to how markets seriously struggle to see the US small bank troubles being resolved without substantial support from the government.
Ultimately, this continues to endorse our baseline bearish bias on the dollar, as a situation that neither develops into a fully-fledged systemic crisis (which would be USD positive) nor significantly improves on the US regional banking side which should keep markets betting on Fed easing later this year. At the moment, there are around 90bp of cuts priced in, starting in July, and the unclear Fed communication is doing very little to reliably push back against those.
Today, we’ll hear from Fed hawk James Bullard, and monitor PMI releases across the world. US figures are expected to stabilise around February’s levels. Anyway, data are playing a secondary role now.
Francesco Pesole
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