Amerikanske dollar tikker opp for å minimere ukentlig tap etter at PCE falt stort sett i tråd

  • The US Dollar in the green against most major currencies on Friday. 
  • Traders are having it difficult to value the next directional move for the US Dollar. 
  • The US Dollar Index tests the downtrend pattern and could snap it should PCE overshoot expectations. 

The US Dollar (USD) is trading stronger in the run up to the last bit of economic data for this week, after it was all over the place on Thursday after the release of the preliminary US Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the first quarter. The USD first jumped on the high Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) numbers in that release with the idea that initial interest-rate cuts will take even longer to occur, with probabilities for December briefly overtaking September. As the dust settled, markets took all figures into account and saw it as a stagflationary play, with equities shooting higher and weighting on the USD as rate cuts could still be on the table for 2024 and discarding earlier rumours of a possible rate hike. 

On the economic data front, the US Federal Reserve’s (Fed) preferred inflation gauge got released. The Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) Price Index did not hold any firm surprises besided that Personal Income and Spending. People are still spending and that means that inflation will not go away quietly, outlining a longer steady rate path, which should support a stronger US Dollar.

Daily digest market movers: Expectations build up

  • Overnight, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) kept its interest rates unchanged, triggering USD/JPY to hit 156.80.
  • A volatile move occured in USD/JPY pair in European trading hours, sending the pair to 155.00 before fully erasing the move and trading back at 156.75 where it was before the correction occured, with markets questioning if there was an intervention by the Japanese Ministry of Finance or by the Bank of Japan.  
  • At 12:30 GMT, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) data for March was released:
    • Both monthly headline and core PCE were unchanged at 0.3%.
    • Yearly headline PCE went from 2.5% to 2.7%.
    • Yearly core PCE was unchanged at 2.8%.
    • Monthly Personal Income did rise to 0.5% from 0.3%.
    • Monthly Personal Spending was unchanged at 0.8%.
  • At 14:00 GMT, the last data element to close off this week were released with the University of Michigan final data for April:
    • Consumer Sentiment went from 77.9 to 77.2..
    • Five-year consumer inflation expectations remained cemented at 3%.
  • Equities are overall in the green on the back of that Bank of Japan rate decision. Across the board from Asia, over Europe to the US futures, all major indices are trading with gains.
  • The CME Fedwatch Tool suggests there is an 88.5% probability that June will still see no change to the Federal Reserve’s feds fund rate. Odds of a rate cut in July are out of the cards, while for September the tool shows a 44.6% chance that rates will be lower than current levels.
  • The benchmark 10-year US Treasury Note trades around 4.68% and keeps lingering around this level.

US Dollar Index Technical Analysis: Easy ahead

The US Dollar Index (DXY) continues its bearish pattern and looks almost inevitable to close the week in the red. The big question is which cycle the US economy is in, as clearly that exceptionalism label is coming off. Stagflation would be the worst possible scenario for the Fed, being unable to cut interest rates with elevated inflation while US performance is deteriorating. 

On the upside, 105.88 (a pivotal level since March 2023) needs to be recovered again before targeting the April 16 high at 106.52. Further up and above the 107.00 round level, the DXY index could meet resistance at 107.35, the October 3 high. 

On the downside, 105.12 and 104.60 should act as support ahead of the 55-day and the 200-day Simple Moving Averages (SMAs) at 104.40 and 104.10, respectively. If those levels are unable to hold, the 100-day SMA near 103.70 is the next best candidate. 

Fed vanlige spørsmål

Pengepolitikken i USA er formet av Federal Reserve (Fed). Fed har to mandater: å oppnå prisstabilitet og fremme full sysselsetting. Dets primære verktøy for å nå disse målene er å justere rentene. Når prisene stiger for raskt og inflasjonen er over Feds mål på 2 %, øker det rentene, noe som øker lånekostnadene i hele økonomien. Dette resulterer i en sterkere US Dollar (USD) ettersom det gjør USA til et mer attraktivt sted for internasjonale investorer å parkere pengene sine. Når inflasjonen faller under 2 % eller arbeidsledigheten er for høy, kan Fed senke rentene for å oppmuntre til låneopptak, noe som tynger greenbacken.

Federal Reserve (Fed) holder åtte politiske møter i året, hvor Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) vurderer økonomiske forhold og tar pengepolitiske beslutninger. FOMC deltar av tolv Fed-tjenestemenn - de syv medlemmene av styremedlemmene, presidenten for Federal Reserve Bank of New York, og fire av de resterende elleve regionale Reserve Bank-presidentene, som tjener ettårsperioder på roterende basis .

I ekstreme situasjoner kan Federal Reserve ty til en policy som heter Quantitative Easing (QE). QE er prosessen der Fed øker strømmen av kreditt betydelig i et fastlåst finanssystem. Det er et ikke-standard politisk tiltak som brukes under kriser eller når inflasjonen er ekstremt lav. Det var Feds foretrukne våpen under den store finanskrisen i 2008. Det innebærer at Fed trykker flere dollar og bruker dem til å kjøpe høyverdige obligasjoner fra finansinstitusjoner. QE svekker vanligvis den amerikanske dollaren.

Kvantitativ innstramming (QT) er den omvendte prosessen av QE, der Federal Reserve slutter å kjøpe obligasjoner fra finansinstitusjoner og ikke reinvesterer hovedstolen fra obligasjonene den har forfall, for å kjøpe nye obligasjoner. Det er vanligvis positivt for verdien av amerikanske dollar.

 

Source: https://www.fxstreet.com/news/us-dollar-looks-wobbly-ahead-of-pce-release-202404261045