Dollar Recovers: XM.com
Written by Achilleas Georgolopoulos, Investment Analyst at XM.com. An original version of this article can be read here.
The US dollar has almost erased its NFP losses as the US stock indices’ rally has stalled. Dovish expectations have taken centre stage but one has to acknowledge that the Fed needs a plethora of weak data prints to firmly open the door to a rate cut as soon as June.
The next key data release is the April inflation report, which will be published on Wednesday, May 15.
Fed members will continue to flood the newswires with comments as voters Jefferson, Collins and Cook are scheduled to speak later today.
Considering yesterday’s relatively moderate appearance by Fed’s Kashkari, the message from the officials today is not expected to diverge much from Chairman Powell’s commentary at last week’s Fed meeting.
The Bank of England holds its third meeting on Thursday with expectations for a dovish show increasing following the weak U.S. NFP report.
Market participants remain split regarding the June rate cut but tomorrow’s quarterly projections could play a crucial role in the BoE’s next move. The pound remains under pressure against both the dollar and the euro.
Putting aside the economic developments, the market is digesting the recent local elections won by the Labour Party.
Considering that the current Labour Party is quite far in terms of its policy direction from the party that ran the UK during the 1997-2010 period, the market might find it difficult to accept Labour’s left-leaning programme.
In the meantime, PM Sunak continues to face fierce criticism from the Conservatives ranks as the threat of a complete decimation at the national elections looks like a very credible scenario.
From a market perspective, the exact timing of the elections is important. The UK might not wish these to be held soon before or after the US ones. This means that September is the likeliest month for the UK elections, potentially upsetting BoE’s plan for an easier monetary policy stance down the line.
Dollar/yen is again on the rise as the yen-positive impact from the repeated BoJ interventions and the weak US NFP report appears to have diminished.
Japanese officials including finance minister Suzuki and BoJ Governor Ueda continue to verbally intervene, but the market is not responding favorably.
Overall, yen interventions need support from monetary policy to be successful. Considering that the Fed is seen cutting over the summer, the ball in the BoJ’s court now to up its hawkish rhetoric.