Fly On Wall Street

Dollar edges up ahead of Fed speak, Aussie dips

Euro eases off one-month high, Sterling steadies

Summary:

The Dollar Index (DXY) steadied, settling at 105.30 (105.20) ahead of more Fed speak this week. US Treasury Yields rebounded, with the 10-Year Rate climbing to 4.50% (4.45%).

On Friday, Fed Governor Michelle Bowman said that the US central bank should proceed “carefully and deliberately” before trimming rates. Scheduled to speak this week are Federal Reserve officials Kashkari, Goolsbee and Barr.

The Euro (EUR/USD) eased to 1.0770 after reaching one-month highs at 1.0790. The ECB is expected to reduce interest rates next month while the Fed is likely to wait until September.

The Australian Dollar (AUD/USD) dipped to 0.6602 from 0.6622. Broad-based US Dollar strength weighed on the Battler. In tandem, the Kiwi (NZD/USD) closed at 0.6020 (0.6035 Friday).

Against the Japanese Yen, the US Dollar kept its bid. The USD/JPY pair rallied to close at 155.75, up from 155.45 Friday. The differential between the US10-year yield (4.50%) and Japanese 10-year JGB yield (0.90%) remained wide.

The British Pound (GBP/USD) closed little changed at 1.2527 (1.2522). Sterling initially soared to 1.2540 after UK GDP (m/m) climbed 0.4% in April following an upward revised 0.2% previously.

The Greenback finished with modest gains versus the Asian and Emerging Market Currencies (EMFX). USD/CNH (Dollar-Offshore Chinese Yuan) rallied to 7.2345 (7.2225). Against the Singapore Dollar, the US Dollar climbed to 1.3542 from 1.3525 Friday.

Other data released Friday saw US Michigan May Consumer Sentiment fall to 67.4 from 77.2 previously, missing expectations at 76. China’s April Inflation Rate (m/m) eased to 0.1%, lower than forecasts at 0.5%, while April PPI (y/y) fell to -2.5%, against estimates at -2.3%.

On the lookout:

The week ahead kicks off with a relatively light calendar release today. Chinese markets are out, celebrating their May Day holiday. New Zealand releases its Services PSI (f/c 49.1 from 47.5 – ACY Finlogix). Australia follows with its National Australia Bank (NAB) April Business Confidence (f/c 2 from 1 previously – ACY Finlogix). Switzerland starts off Europe with its Swiss April Consumer Confidence (f/c -40 from -38 previously – ACY Finlogix). Germany releases its March Current Account (f/c +EUR 26.5 billion from +EUR 29.8 billion – ACY Finlogix). Canada releases it’s March Building Permits (m/m f/c -4.6% from 9.3% – ACY Finlogix).
FOMC members Jefferson and Mester are both scheduled to speak at an event hosted by the Cleveland Federal Reserve. Fed Chair Jerome Powell is due to speak today. Neel Kashkari, Minneapolis Fed President delivers a speech tomorrow (Tuesday). Loretta Mester and Ralph Bostic speak on Thursday. Later this week, the US economic data calendar picks up with Core PPI (Tuesday), Headline and Core CPI, Retail Sales (Wednesday), Weekly Jobless Claims and Philly Fed Manufacturing Index (Thursday). On Friday, China releases its trifecta of Retail Sales, Industrial Production and Fixed Asset Investment reports.

Trading perspective:

The rise in US bond yields ahead of more Fed speak this week lifted the Dollar Index (DXY). On the Chicago IMM Futures market, adjustments to speculative long Dollar bets continued to be unwound pressurizing the Greenback. At the end of the trading day on Friday, the Dollar Index (DXY) settled at 105.30, little changed from 105.20. Expect this trend to continue in Asia today, with the Dollar poised to move in either direction. The catalyst will be commentary from the speeches of several Federal Reserve officials. Technically, the US Dollar is likely to see a downward correction against its Rivals.

Source: Finlogix.com

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