Navigating the FX Landscape: Evaluating the Dollar Bear Trend Amidst Market Dynamics
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At the start of a quiet week for data, the dollar is hovering near recent lows. However, we do not think this is yet the start of the big, cyclical turn lower in the dollar we expect for next year. Instead, falling volatility and firm short-dated US yields can probably see the dollar hold onto current levels. Highlights this week include OPEC+ and key speakers.
The DXY dollar index is down around 3.5% from its highs seen in October. The drop looks largely down to the view that the Federal Reserve's tightening cycle is over and that portfolio capital can now be put back to work in bonds, equities, and emerging markets. While acknowledging that November and December are seasonally soft months for the dollar, our view is that this dollar sell-off has come a little early. We are bearish on the dollar through 2024 but expect the core driver to be a bullish steepening of the US Treasury curve – which has not happened yet. Indeed, US two-year Treasury yields remain firm near 5%. We thus urge caution in chasing this dollar decline much further.
In terms of what this week has to offer, we pick out three themes: the Fed, OPEC+ and US data. Fed communication this week will come from the release of the Fed's Beige book and also some key speakers, including Fed Chair Jay Powell, on Friday. Remember that the Beige Book paints a picture of the economy to prepare the FOMC for its meeting on 13 December. It certainly is not clear that the Beige Book will paint a soft enough picture to support the 80bp of fed easing already priced for next year.
In terms of the OPEC+ meeting, our commodities team believe that the Saudis will extend their voluntary supply cut and that the oil market can find some support - a mild dollar positive. In terms of US data, the highlight should be some stable (0.2% MoM) core PCE inflation data for October and the ISM Manufacturing data on Friday. Thursday's US inflation data is probably the largest bearish risk to the dollar this week.
However, with cross-market volatility falling, it seems investors are once again interested in carry trade strategies. We have seen this theme several times this year already, and it is not a dollar negative. It is a negative for the funding currencies like the Japanese yen and the Chinese renminbi. Until we get some clear dovish communication from the Fed or US data is materially weak enough, we think this dollar drop might have come far enough for the time being and suspect that the 103.00/103.50 support area could well hold the DXY this week.