USD: US economy can best handle higher rates
FX volatility levels remain very high as central bankers battle with high inflation and investors try to position for their next move. The dollar was briefly lower yesterday after the Swiss National Bank's (SNB) surprise hike raised expectations that the Bank of England (BoE) and Bank of Japan (BoJ) would follow suit with 'more forceful' (that phrase has cropped up a lot recently in central bank circles) monetary policy.
We discuss the BoE later, but barring a surprise announcement from BoJ Governor Kuroda at his press conference today (due at 0830CET) it looks like the BoJ is sticking to its guns and still printing money. This suggests that USD/JPY will be pressing 135 again, above which a disorderly move could prompt BoJ FX intervention. The alternative is that the Ministry of Finance instructs some state actors (buy-side) to sell a lot of dollars near 135 if Japanese authorities have failed to secure permission for intervention from the US Treasury. A relevant point here is that substantial FX intervention could add to woes in the US bond market, where US securities could be sold to raise the dollars to intervene.
We mention the subject of intervention since news that the SNB could be selling from its substantial FX reserve stockpile seemed to spook European bond markets yesterday - especially the five-year sector which seems to be the average duration for central bank bond portfolios. The Czech National Bank (CNB) is already selling from its FX reserves - perhaps as much as EUR10bn over the last month as it fights Czech koruna weakness after the installation of a new dovish board. FX reserve sales and higher bond yields are not particularly helping the equity environment this summer and should maintain levels of FX volatility near the recent highs.
In all of this, we would prefer to back the dollar. The US economy went into the current inflation shock operating above capacity. Regions like the eurozone were still running output gaps and the ECB is merely reacting to a supply shock. We think the pricing of the Fed tightening cycle has the longest staying power - keeping short-end US rates and the dollar bid this summer.
For today, the only US data is May industrial production and we may see some further position adjustments on June contract expiries and ahead of Monday's Juneteenth public holiday in the US. Expect DXY to find continued demand under 104. Also, look out for opening remarks from Fed Chair Jerome Powell at a conference at 1445CET today.
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