Tag Archive: Federal Reserve
The Dollar Jumps Back
Overview: The pendulum of market expectations has
swung dramatically and now looks for 100 bp cut in the Fed funds target this
year. That seems extreme. At the same time, the dollar's downside momentum has
stalled, suggesting that the dollar may recover some of the ground lost
recently as the interest rate leg was knocked out from beneath it. The euro
twice in the past two days pushed through $1.09 only to be turned away.
Similarly, sterling pushed...
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Market Hears Dovish Fed Hike and Sells Dollars
Overview: The dollar remains under pressure
following the Federal Reserve's rate hike. The market thinks it heard that the
Fed was done hiking, even though Fed Chair Powell held out the possibility that
"some additional firming may be necessary." The Norwegian krone
is the strongest of the G10 currencies today, up more than 1%, spurred by a 25
bp hike and a commitment to do more. The Dollar Index briefly traded below
102.00 for the...
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North America likely will Sell USD Bounce Seen in Europe
Overview: The failure of the Federal Reserve to push harder against the market's dovish views and the easing of financial conditions encouraged a risk-on trade that saw the dollar and yields slump and equities rally. There has been limited follow-through dollar selling today, and a small recovery ahead of the Bank of England and European Central Bank meetings.
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“Markets and civil society are win-win institutions, government and politics are zero-sum.”
Division, friction and polarization have been on the rise in the West for at least a decade, but the escalation we saw during the “covid years” was especially worrying. Over the last year, this “worry” has become a truly pressing concern, even a real emergency one might argue, as inflationary pressures and an actual war were added to the mix of political and social tensions.
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“It begins”: The rise of the digital dollar
In mid-November, while the whole world was focused on the Ukraine crisis, the US midterms or whatever other “big story” the media decided was more important, a truly momentous shift took place in the global financial system. It might seem like a small step on the surface, but it has the potential to bring about a real and possibly irreversible sea change in the way we use money; or better said, the way it uses us.
As Reuters reported on the...
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Johnson Resigns, but Still not Clear if He Controls the Timing
Overview: The resignation of a UK prime minister makes for high political drama, but the markets hardly moved on it. Sterling, like most of the major currencies, are recovering against the dollar today.
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No Turn Around Tuesday
Overview: The global capital markets are calm today. Most of the large bourses in the Asia Pacific extended yesterday’s gain. Europe’s Stoxx 600 is advancing for the third consecutive session and is near two-and-a-half week highs.
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Johnson’s Ability to Lead Tories into Victory at Risk with Today’s By-Elections
Overview: Asia Pacific equities were mixed. Gains were recorded in China, Hong Kong, Australia, and India, among the large markets, while Japan was mostly flat and South Korea and Taiwan shares fell.
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FX Daily, March 17: Investors are Skeptical that the Fed can Achieve a Soft-Landing. Can the BOE do Better?
Overview: The markets continue to digest the implications of yesterday's Fed move and Beijing's signals of more economic supportive efforts as the Bank of England's move awaited. The US 5–10-year curve is straddling inversion and the 2-10 curve has flattened as the Fed moves from one horn of the dilemma (behind the inflation curve) to the other horn (recession fears). Asia Pacific equities extended yesterday's surge. The Hang Seng led the...
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FOMC Sets New Course
The Fed delivered what it was expected to do: double the pace of tapering and project a more aggressive interest rate response with its individual forecasts. The dollar initially rallied on the headlines, and new sessions highs were recorded, but the price action was a bit of a head-fake, as it were. The greenback's gains were quickly pared, though it remained above JPY114 ahead of Chair Powell's press conference. The market had already...
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Central Bank Fest
Next week is the last big week of the year, and what a week it will be: Five major central banks meet and at least nine from emerging market countries. Norway's Norges Bank is the most likely major central bank to hike its key (deposit) rate (December 16). It would be the second hike of the year. The economy is enjoying a solid recovery, and headline inflation rose to 4.6% in November, its fastest pace since 2008. The underlying rate, which...
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Covid Wave Knocks Euro Down and to new 6-year Lows Against the Swiss Franc
Overview: Concerns about the virus surge in Europe cut short the euro's bounce and sent it back below $1.1300 and are also weighing on central European currencies, including the Hungarian forint, despite yesterday's aggressive hike of the one-week deposit rate. Austria has reintroduced a hard 20-day lockdown. Germany's health minister warned that the situation deteriorated and vaccines were not enough to break the wave. He was explicit that a...
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US Retail Sales and Industrial Output to Accelerate; China not so Much
At the halfway point of Q4, the markets' focus is on three things: inflation, growth, and central banks' response. With US and Chinese October inflation readings behind us, the focus shifts to the real economy's performance, the world's two largest economies reporting retail sales and industrial production figures. Helped by stronger auto sales, the first increase in six months, US retail sales likely turned in another solid showing of around...
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Is Central Banks’ License to Print Money About to Expire?
2022-10-29
by Stephen Flood
2022-10-29
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