Dollar Rallies on Hawkish Powell

Dollar Rallies on Hawkish Powell


The dollar index (DXY00) rallied to a 2-week high on Wednesday and finished up by +0.62%.  The dollar found support on Wednesday amid easing global trade tensions, which are supportive of economic growth prospects.  The US and South Korea finalized a trade deal on Wednesday that will see South Korea make $150 billion in shipbuilding investments and cap US tariffs on South Korean goods at 15%.  Also, President Trump said he expects to lower tariffs on Chinese goods over the fentanyl crisis.

Gains in the dollar accelerated on Wednesday despite the FOMC cutting interest rates by 25 bp later today and ending quantitative tightening.  The dollar jumped on hawkish comments from Fed Chair Powell, who said a rate cut at the December FOMC meeting “is not a foregone conclusion.”

The dollar is still under pressure from the ongoing US government shutdown.  The longer the shutdown is maintained, the more likely the US economy will suffer and the more likely the Fed will have to cut interest rates.


US Sep pending home sales were unchanged m/m, weaker than expectations of a +1.2% m/m increase.

As expected, the FOMC on Wednesday cut the federal funds target range by -25 bp to 3.75%-4.00% from 4.00%-4.25%.  The Fed also said it will end quantitative tightening and stop shrinking its balance sheet on December 1.

The FOMC post-meeting statement said that “downside risks to employment rose in recent months,” and that “inflation has moved up since earlier in the year and remains somewhat elevated.”

Fed Chair Powell cautioned against the assumption that the Fed will cut interest rates again in December, saying, “A further reduction in the policy rate at the December FOMC meeting is not a foregone conclusion, far from it.”

The markets are discounting a 69% chance that the FOMC will cut the fed funds target range by 25 bp at the next FOMC meeting on December 9-10. The markets are discounting an overall 72 bp rate cut by the end of 2026 to 3.40% from the current effective federal funds rate of 4.12%.

The dollar still has some negative carryover from Monday on reduced safe-haven demand after US and Chinese negotiators, who met over the weekend in Malaysia, said they reached a tentative trade agreement.  The agreement is expected to be finalized at Thursday’s summit between Presidents Trump and Xi on the sidelines of the APAC conference in South Korea.  Treasury Secretary Bessent said the agreement means the US threat of a 100% tariff on US imports from China, set to start November 1, is “effectively off the table.” Meanwhile, China agreed not to restrict the export of rare earth metals for at least one year and to buy a “substantial” amount of US soybeans.  The two sides also made progress on shipping fees and US demands that China crack down on the export to the US of fentanyl and precursors.  The two sides may also reach an agreement that would allow US consumers to continue to access TikTok.


finance.yahoo.com
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