- The US Dollar pops higher, partly erasing Tuesday’s losses.
- US Factory Orders and FOMC Minutes are on focus this Wednesday.
- The US Dollar Index is back above 103.00, though markets bear nervous reactions.
The US Dollar (USD) is back from a short hiatus on Tuesday due to the US national holiday. Markets focus back on the two main key elements for this week, which are the US Jobs report on Friday and the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Minutes that are set to be published at 18:00 GMT. Trades will look for clues on the number of interest-rate hikes expected, and foremost, the longevity of the pivot level the Fed will want to maintain before starting to cut rates. Any prospect of rate cuts will result in a weaker US Dollar as the interest rate value for the currency will start to decrease against its peers, likely prompting gains for US equities instead.
Other data points for this Wednesday to look for are Factory Orders and the IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism Index, both due at 14:00 GMT. . The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) numbers for the Crude Oil reserves of the US have been pushed forward to Thursday. The key FOMC minutes will be published at 18:00 GMT, and traders will see the oil reserve data from the American Petroleum Institute (API) at 20:30 GMT.
Daily digest: US Dollar has its work cut out to erase Tuesday’s losses
- US Factory Orders, set to come out at 14:00 GMT, are expected to jump from 0.4% previous to 0.8% in May.
- John C. Williams, the president of Federal Reserve Bank of New York, is set to make an appearance around 20:00 GMT and could deliver additional comments to guide the markets around the FOMC Minutes statement.
- The US Dollar is stuck in choppy trading against the Euro as Purchasing Manager Index numbers fell below 50 for France and Italy. Both Europe and the US are thus seeing contractions in their PMIs. At the same time, the European Central Bank (ECB) published a survey of inflation expectations, which have been revised to the downside. This adds to evidence of subsiding inflation pressures, making it more likely that the ECB will end its hiking cycle sooner than markets anticipate.
- China’s June Caixin Services and Composite Purchase Manager Index (PMI) declined compared with the previous month, triggering a sell-off in Chinese equities and a weaker Yuan.
- Asian markets were mostly in the red, with the Japanese Topix closing nearly unchanged and the Chinese Hang Seng losing 1.57%. European indices are on the descent as well, though no major index is losing more than 1%. US equity futures are mildly in the green and will possibly stay rather muted until investors hear more from the FOMC Minutes.
- The CME Group FedWatch Tool shows that markets are pricing in a 88.2% chance of a 25 basis points (bps) interest-rate hike on July 26. The dislocation between market expectations and what the Fed has been communicating in terms of number of rate hikes is still persistent and could trigger a stronger US Dollar once markets get to the point of realisation. The FOMC Minutes could trigger a rise in possibility of a second hike in some later-dated futures.
- The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield halted trading at 3.84% on Wednesday after being closed throughout Tuesday. No clear sense of direction to take away around halfway through the European session
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