USD: Soft dollar momentum shouldn't last long
Similar to what had happened in the aftermath of six of the previous eight FOMC announcements, a “sell-the-fact” reaction and long-squeeze in the dollar was triggered yesterday. In particular, markets seemed to cling on to the notion that the Fed will slow down tightening from now, which resulted in an equities rally as well as some re-pricing lower in rate expectations for the remainder of the year. The OIS curve currently embeds 100bp of extra tightening at the September, November and December meetings combined.
As discussed in our FOMC review, we do expect the Fed to switch to 50bp in September, but vague forward guidance and the migration to a fully data-dependent approach mean that a lot can change from now until the next meeting. We also think that – in a similar fashion to what the ECB did to the euro early this month – the dollar will now become more data-dependent, as markets will be searching for any evidence on the inflation and growth side that could warrant a dovish shift by the Fed.
Speaking of recession, while Chair Jerome Powell seemed to retain a rather optimistic approach on the matter, today’s GDP numbers will be a first test of the dollar’s reaction function to incoming data. Consensus is centred around a 0.5% quarter-on-quarter annualised growth rate in 2Q, and our economist’s baseline scenario is a 0.4% reading, even though we highlight some downside risks (even a second consecutive negative quarterly reading) given the swings in inventories and trade figures.
Looking at the coming weeks, our view is that the post-FOMC dollar weakness may start to fade quite soon. The road to recovery for global risk assets is still long and quite bumpy, as the magnitude of a global slowdown remains high. Geopolitical risks also remain elevated, making the outlook for commodity prices uncertain. In addition, our suspicion is that markets should retain most dollar longs until the Fed is giving clearer signals that it is pivoting to a less hawkish stance. Our baseline scenario is that the dollar will consolidate around these levels and may re-strengthen from now until the September FOMC meeting. Expect a heightened sensitivity to data to keep volatility high.
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