USD: Temporary calm
FX markets have entered a period of temporary calm and ranges have been quite subdued this week. Half year-end may have had some bearing on the matter and yet it would not be a surprise to see some moves developing around key fixings today - especially the WMR fix at 17CET. One might have thought these conditions would lead to lower levels of implied or expected volatility - perhaps on the notion of FX markets finding new equilibrium levels. But no, EUR/USD one-month volatility is still bid above 9%.
Keeping volatility bid remains the uncertainty as to how far and how fast central bankers need to tighten policy to keep inflation under control. Certainly listening to the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) this week, the message to central banks was to act early and to act decisively. The short-term pain of aggressive tightening (perhaps a recession) would be far more preferable to the longer-term pain of a wage-price spiral.
On that subject, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde and Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey all speak on a Sintra panel today at 15CET. Currently, money markets price US, eurozone and UK policy rates at 3.40%, 1.10% and 2.90%, respectively, by the end of this year. Of the three, we would think the pricing of US rates is still the most subject to upside risks. And that is why the FX option markets are allocating heavy day-weight volatilities to dates like 13 July, when the June US CPI data is released.
For today, look out for those remarks from central bankers and also the US May reading for the headline and core PCE deflator readings. High month-on-month readings are expected for headline and core (0.7% and 0.4%) and any upside surprise could see US rates and the dollar nudge higher.
DXY is consolidating above 104.00 and barring any large equity rally today on quarter or half year-end re-balancing, there seems little reason to expect much of a dollar sell-off.
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