USD: Battered risk currencies could receive a reprieve
Liquidity is returning to FX markets after Monday's US public holiday. The US data calendar is pretty light today and the next big input will be tomorrow night's release of the June FOMC minutes, where we will hear more about the rationale behind the 75bp hike. That is probably a dollar-positive event risk.
Before then, FX markets have a little positive news to digest this morning. Reports out yesterday suggest that President Biden could be announcing the roll-back of some US tariffs on over $300bn of Chinese (largely) consumer goods. Clearly, high US inflation is driving this discussion and lowering inflation, rather than China-bashing, sounds more of a vote winner at the US November mid-term elections. Any progress here could provide a small lift to risk-sensitive, pro-growth currencies - having seen the damage done to these currencies during former President Trump's 2018-19 trade war.
The above sounds a slight dollar negative. But what does this mean to the central bank story? Equity futures have been marked a little higher on the news and we have seen US yields rise - presumably on the view that recession fears are marginally eased and that central banks can get on with the job of normalising policy. Certainly that was the case in Australia overnight, where the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) delivered what could be described as a hawkish 50bp hike. Here, the RBA cited low unemployment and high savings as keeping demand supported. And there was certainly no sign of the RBA blinking on what it said will be a further normalisation of policy in the 'months ahead'. Perhaps the Australian dollar could receive a brief reprieve today after a tough June. AUD/USD looks biased to 0.6950.
DXY looks mixed today. The China news is a slight DXY negative, but US yields are bouncing back today reminding us that if the RBA has cause to keep tightening, the tightening case is even more compelling for the Fed. On balance, DXY could probably drift back to 104.50 or a little lower, but should hold above 104.00 ahead of tomorrow's FOMC minutes. And for those looking for a little stability in summer markets, the near 9% implied yield on the Mexican peso three month forward looks attractive.
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