Dollar just off 20-year highs, rally hinges on Fed signals

Publish date: Wed, 04 May 2022, 06:33 AM

LONDON, May 4 — The dollar index pulled further away from 20-year highs today, having already priced the US Federal Reserve to raise interest rates by a half-point later in the day and by some 250 basis points by year-end.

Currency markets have settled in to wait for the Fed’s 1800 GMT announcement and Chairman Jerome Powell’s news conference, having endured wild gyrations in recent weeks, with the dollar soaring to 20-year highs against a basket of currencies .

Money markets are betting the Fed will raise rates as high as 3.6 per cent by end-2023 to tame inflation at 40-year highs. Having kicked off its hiking cycle in March, the Fed is seen delivering a 50 bps move today, with two more half-point hikes priced for the next two meetings.

It may also announce when it will start reducing its US$9 trillion (RM39.2 trillion) balance sheet.

Those bets lifted the dollar index 5 per cent last month to around 103.93. It has since slipped 0.3 per cent off those levels and by 00830 GMT, was at 103.39, slightly lower on the day.

“A major correction in the dollar would happen only if the Fed pushes back against hawkish market pricing and until they do that, there is a degree of freedom for markets to reprice the terminal rate to 4per cent,” ING Bank strategist Francesco Pesole.

“We are also in a situation where if you let go of dollar positions, where do you put your money?,” Pesole said, noting the effect of the Russia-Ukraine war on Europe and the economic slowdown in China.

Dollar strength has weighed on other currencies, pushing the euro last week to two-decade lows around US$1.0469. It stood at US$1.0512 today.

“The fundamentals, the interest rate difference, the growth outlook, the risk-off mood, all tend to favour the dollar,” said Gergely Majoros, member of the investment committee at Carmignac.

“A lot of factors point to a stronger dollar and weaker euro...in our global portfolio we have increased dollar positioning.”

Some note markets’ expectations of future US inflation—so-called breakevens—derived from Treasury inflation-protected securities (TIPS) have eased, with 5-year breakevens around 3.2 per cent versus April highs of 3.6 per cent.

ING’s Pesole dismissed the moves, however.

“If the Fed provides an indication they will aggressively front-load the tightening cycle and the back end of the Treasury curve comes off a bit, that will be the indication that markets are starting to price the Fed getting ahead of the curve (on inflation),” he added.

 

 - Reuters

 

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