Continuum Economics
  • Search
  • About Us
  • Buy
  • Invite A Friend
  • My Basket
  • Articles
  • Calendar
  • Forecasts
  • Events
  • Data
  • Newsletters
  • My Alerts
  • Community
  • Directory
  • About Us
  • Buy
  • Invite A Friend
  • My Basket
  • Articles
    • All
    • Thematic
    • Tactical
    • Asia
    • EMEA
    • Americas
    • Newsletters
    • Freemium
    • Editor's Choice
    • Most Viewed
    • Most Shared
    • Most Liked
  • Calendar
    • Interactive
      • China
      • United States
      • Eurozone
      • United Kingdom
    • Month Ahead
    • Reviews
    • Previews
  • Forecasts
    • Forecasts
    • Key Views
  • Events
    • Media
    • Conference Calls
  • Data
    • Country Insights
    • Shadow Credit Ratings
    • Full CI Data Download
  • Newsletters
  • My Alerts
  • Community
    • FX
    • Fixed Income
    • Macro Strategy
    • Credit Markets
    • Equities
    • Commodities
    • Precious Metals
    • Renewables
  • Directory
  • My Account
  • Notifications Setup
  • Account Details
  • Recent Devices
  • Distribution Lists
  • Shared Free Trials
  • Saved Articles
  • Shared Alerts
  • My Posts
Published: 2023-12-12T15:59:58.000Z

FX Daily Strategy: APAC, December 13th

byAdrian Schmidt

Senior FX Strategist
-

FOMC the focus, dots to move dovishly

Powell nevertheless likely to play down chances of an early cut

EUR/USD biased higher but with limited scope

GBP may have more downside on UK GDP

 

 

 

 

FOMC the focus, dots to move dovishly

Powell nevertheless likely to play down chances of an early cut

EUR/USD biased higher but with limited scope

GBP may have more downside on UK GDP

Wednesday’s focus will be on the FOMC meeting, even though there is no expectation of any change in policy this time around. However, the tone of the statement will be important. The November employment report and November CPI are unlikely to have had a significant impact on Fed thinking, although at the margin they were on the strong side of consensus. Chairman Jerome Powell will make it clear easing is not yet on the agenda but the dots are likely to move in a dovish direction, and this will sustain market hopes for easing by mid-2024.

Since the Fed's last Summary of Economic Projections seen in September Q3, GDP has surprised to the upside, while inflation has fallen faster than expected. This is likely to see a significant upward revision to the 2023 GDP forecast and significant downward revisions to 2023 inflation forecasts. Forecasts for 2024 and beyond will however be more important, and we expect the Fed will see the Q3 2023 GDP strength as unsustainable and make little adjustment to their forecasts for 2024 GDP, of 1.5% Q4/Q4, or to their 1.8% forecasts for both 2025 and 2026. On inflation however, we believe the Fed will now have a greater degree of confidence that the improvement is inflation is sustainable, and forecasts for 2024 and 2025 will also be revised lower. They may even see the 2.0% target being achieved in 2025 rather than 2026 as was the case in September. Despite the likely upward revision to GDP, unemployment forecasts look set to be fine-tuned marginally higher.

In practice, the dominant factor may be lower dots in the FOMC projections, especially if there isn’t any upgrade to 2024 growth as we suspect will be the case. This suggests some modest downside risks for USD front end yields, but this may be offset by Powell’s comments, in which he is likely to lean against expectations of early cuts. As it stands, the market is pricing 110 bps of Fed easing through 2024 against 133bps of ECB easing and 90bps of easing from the BoE. This relates to the expectation of much weaker Eurozone growth and more persistent UK inflation. However, in practice, we suspect that policy decisions are likely to be fairly closely aligned, as the ECB tends to have a hawkish bias and UK growth is likely to be similarly weak to the Eurozone with rates starting at a significantly higher level. This suggests there may be downside risks for short term US/Eurozone yield spreads, which ought to mean modest upside risks for EUR/USD. But EUR/USD is starting from a level that looks a little high relative to current yield spreads, so we wouldn’t expect any substantial EUR gains.

For GBP/USD, the October GDP data released Wednesday morning might also have an impact. Sentiment on UK growth has improved of late, with a 0.2% rise in September GDP and much higher than expected PMIs in November, but we expect the October GDP data to be on the weak side of expectations. The market consensus is for no change m/m, but we look for a 0.2% decline. GBP already fell back on Tuesday after the softer UK labour market data, and this could extend the decline, especially given the market pricing of relatively hawkish BoE policy.  

Continue to read the article for free
Login

or

or

Topics
Foreign Exchange
FX Daily Strategy
FX & Money Markets Now!
FX & Money Markets Now! (North America)
FX & Money Markets Now! (Asia)
FX & Money Markets Now! (Europe)

GENERAL

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Our Team
  • Careers

LEGAL

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Compliance
  • GDPR

GET IN TOUCH

  • Contact Us
Continuum Economics
The Technical Analyst Awards Winner 2021
The Technical Analyst Awards Finalist 2020
image