Dollar steady, euro soft as traders wager rate cuts to begin in Q1 – Times of India
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The euro was down 0.1% against the dollar at $1.0783, after touching a three-week low of $1.0775, as markets adjust rate expectations lower following soft data and dovish central bank commentary.
The single currency was also at a three-month low against the pound, a five-week low versus the yen and a 6-1/2 week low against the Swiss franc.
“The story in currency markets is mostly about a softer euro,” said Niels Christensen, chief analyst at Nordea.
“Yesterday’s comments from ECB‘s Schnabel supported the market view of early rate cuts.”
Influential policy-maker Isabel Schnabel on Tuesday told Reuters that further interest rate hikes could be taken off the table given a “remarkable” fall in inflation.
Markets are now placing around an 85% chance that the ECB cuts interest rates at the March meeting, with almost 150 basis points worth of cuts priced by the end of next year.
The ECB will set interest rates on Thursday next week and is all but certain to leave them at the current record high of 4%. The Federal Reserve and Bank of England are also likely to hold rates steady next Wednesday and Thursday respectively.
Fed officials are now in a blackout period ahead of the Dec. 12-13 meeting, where a key focus will be the updated projections of where they see rates at in 2024.
Traders have priced around a 60% chance of the central bank cutting rates in March, according to CME’s FedWatch tool. They have also priced in at least 125 basis points of cuts next year.
Investors have been reassessing the extent of US rate cuts next year in the past few days, helping lift the dollar.
“Markets have gone a bit overboard with pricing in very aggressive path of rate cuts through next year,” said Aninda Mitra, head of Asia macro and investment strategy at BNY Mellon Investment Management.
Mitra said there could be a snapback should the Fed drive home the message more forcefully that it is not about to cut rates anytime soon.
“Our view is that Fed might hold off till the second quarter and even then the cuts would be a lot more shallower than what the market would like,” Mitra said.
The widely expected rate cuts from the Fed will result in the dollar loosening its grip on other G10 currencies next year, dimming the outlook for the greenback, according to Reuters poll of foreign exchange strategists.
The dollar index, which measures the currency against six other majors, was little changed at 103.94.
The spotlight in Asia was on China, as markets grappled with rating agency Moody’s cut to the Asian giant’s credit outlook.
The offshore Chinese yuan rose 0.11% to $7.1661 per dollar, a day after Moody’s cut China’s credit outlook to “negative”.
The spot yuan rate opened at 7.1570 per dollar and was last changing hands at 7.1577.
China’s major state-owned banks stepped up US dollar selling forcefully after the Moody’s statement on Tuesday, and they continued to sell the greenback on Wednesday morning, Reuters reported.
Elsewhere in Asia, the Japanese yen was flat at 147.14 per dollar. The Australian dollar rose 0.4% to $0.6581, while the New Zealand dollar rose 0.5% to $0.6157.
In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin eased 0.5% to $43,868 having surged above $44,000 earlier in the session.
The world’s largest cryptocurrency has gained 150% this year, fuelled in part by optimism that a US regulator will soon approve exchange-traded spot bitcoin funds (ETFs).