Gold prices steady near $3,400/oz as Sept rate cut bets rise; econ. data awaited
Having enjoyed a brief session on Friday of unalloyed joy as Fed Chair Jerome Powell hinted at a September rate cut, financial markets may now face some uncertainty on political developments in France and the US. We’re still happy with a bearish story for the US dollar, but it might have to be the more defensive Japanese yen or Swiss franc which takes the lead now
USD: Focus on Cook’s Removal
The US dollar briefly sold off 0.6% (and then rebounded) in Asia after news broke that US President Donald Trump was dismissing Lisa Cook, a member of the Federal Reserve’s governing board. This follows allegations of mortgage application irregularity.
The move by the Department of Justice yesterday to open an investigation into the issue was seen by the President as providing sufficient ’cause’ for him to make the move. Cook rejects his authority for the removal, and the case will likely end up in court, leaving the question of whether she retains her post during the appeal or whether the Fed Governing Board and the rate-setting FOMC will be one member down until the court case is resolved.
After the resignation of Adriana Kugler and the appointment of Stephen Miran, the influential governing board is starting to lean towards Trump’s way. Investors will naturally start to increasingly question the independence of the Fed, which would result in a steeper yield curve and a weaker dollar. The US 2-30 year yield curve broke to a new cyclical high overnight at 122bp and is back to levels seen before the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
The question will be whether this pressure on the Fed triggers an outright sell-off in the long-end of the bond market. On that subject, this week sees the US Treasury auction $144bn of two, five and seven-year Treasury notes, where presumably Thursday’s seven-year issue will be the most challenging.
Overnight developments stand in contrast to the benign bullish steepening of the yield curve triggered by Powell’s dovish speech at Jackson Hole on Friday. Equity investors will no doubt keep track of the long end of the Treasury market this week, where a sell-off could pressure global equities after a good run in August. Pressure on the Fed is a dollar negative, but if Treasuries and equities start to come off, it will be the likes of the Japanese yen and Swiss franc which outperform, not the euro. And the euro has some new baggage – see below.
Away from politics, the US data calendar this week sees US consumer confidence today, a revision to second-quarter GDP on Thursday and core PCE inflation on Friday. We’ll also hear an important speech on monetary policy from the Fed’s Christopher Waller on Thursday. He voted for a rate cut in July and is seen as one of the front-runners to replace Powell as Fed Chair next May. Let’s see if he’s turned even more dovish, given recent US employment data.
It looks like it could be a choppy week in FX. The softer euro is making the DXY look bid. We suspect DXY can continue to bounce around in a 97.50-98.50 range for a while. USD/JPY looks toppy in the 148.00/148.50 area, and we retain a forecast of 145 for the end of September.
EUR: French Government Looks Likely to Fall in September
Hitting EUR/USD late on Monday was the surprise announcement from French Prime Minister François Bayrou that he was calling a vote of confidence in his government’s fiscal austerity plans on 8 September. The numbers don’t look good in that his centrist party has 210 seats in parliament, while the far left and the far right have a combined 330 seats and have already said they will vote no.
French government bonds had already been underperforming in an otherwise benign environment for European government debt this summer. And we’ll all be waiting for headlines today to see whether French 10-year yields start trading through Italy. The broader question for the euro is whether recent French news destabilises appetite for the euro more broadly, or whether this is an isolated French issue.
Given the ’push’ factors away from the dollar at the moment (pressure on the Fed and the macro justification to cut rates), we’re not ready to go all out bearish on EUR/USD over this. But cross rates like EUR/JPY and EUR/CHF can start to come under some pressure as the FX regime shifts away from the low-volatility, benign conditions seen through August.
Perhaps the largest threat to the euro at present is positioning. Futures data shows both the asset management and leveraged fund communities running large net long positions. Expect a pick up in protective EUR/USD downside positions in the FX options market. And depending on how hard French bonds get hit today, a break of support at 1.1580/90 could see follow-through to the 1.1500/1520 area – especially since investors probably added to EUR/USD longs on Friday’s dovish tilt from Powell.
GBP: Hawkish BoE and French Politics to Weigh on EUR/GBP
EUR/GBP looks to stay offered this week as French politics prompts some reassessment of long euro exposure. This comes at a time when a credibly hawkish Bank of England is already providing sterling with some support. Following this month’s hawkish turn by the BoE, the market struggles to price one 25bp cut this year (just 12bp currently priced) and barely two cuts by next summer.
There doesn’t look too much on the agenda to knock the BoE’s hawkish agenda this week, which suggests EUR/GBP will be pressing support at 0.8600 shortly.
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