FED

Breaking out the popcorn for Powell Jackson Hole speech.

Forex 4 minutes to read
Picture of John Hardy
John J. Hardy

Global Head of Macro Strategy

Summary:  Currency market trading ranges are compressed lately, but is misleading as the potential for volatility is considerable on coming policy choices aimed at taming the risks to sovereign bond markets. Meanwhile, this Friday’s Jackson Hole speech may provide little guidance on the Fed’s September FOMC decision.


Breaking out the popcorn this Friday for Jackson Hole speech and then the Fed’s five-year policy review
Friday will see Fed Chair Powell’s Jackson Hole speech, which few expect will contain strong hints of the September FOMC decision due to the important incoming data awaited before that meeting, including the August jobs report, August CPI and August PPI (markets a bit more twitchy on that figure after the spike in the July data). Still, the tone could hint at the response function to that incoming data. It would have been more interesting for Powell to pontificate on Fed independence and point out the risks from continued fiscal profligacy, but perhaps those are points that Powell will save for his resignation/firing/end-of-term speech.

Also upcoming from the Powell Fed is the once-in-five-year policy review. The last review in 2020 saw the Fed announcing that it would be happy to allow a period of “catch-up” inflation to ensure that the average inflation over time achieved the 2% target. With the inflationary environment post-pandemic and more than enough catch-up inflation in the bag than the Fed ever envisioned, this idea will quickly end up in the dust-bin of history and should be scrapped in the review (it was already irrelevant). Also inevitably bound for the dustbin is whatever replaces it, as the exigencies of keeping the US treasury financed will only mount from here and will mean that the Fed will largely or entirely lose its independence, acting as an auxiliary to the Treasury’s needs, which could take some form of yield-curve-control, QE or even MMT-lite, and even capital controls or all three. Alas, that won’t be in this review either. I think the best, most commonsensical thing would be for the Fed to scrap the dot plot that was designed for an entirely different era in economic history and was only ever about reassuring the post-GFC market that the Fed had its back with forward guidance. Forward guidance from the Fed now offers mostly reputational risks with no rewards.

What are we waiting for as EURUSD can’t take out 1.1700 – and USDJPY can’t do anything?
There seems little conviction in this market as multiple attempts to reestablish the USD downtrend are failing, with extremely low volatility in risk assets and global bond markets likely to blame here. This suggests some risk that the side of least resistance is higher in the US dollar, but again, little conviction on that account when the price action is not providing any clues and we are still some way from the next catalysts outside of possible brief fuss over Jackson Hole. As discussed above and below, sovereign bond markets are spring loaded as the inevitable need to make new policy steps to relieve pressure on government finances have explosive potential implications for currencies as a safety valve when yields won’t be allowed to absorb market forces. On that note, long yields are pressurizing the situation in Germany and the UK, where the long 30-year gilt is threatening to hit multi-year highs today after a surge yesterday.

Chart: USDJPY
Yields are pressuring slightly higher here, if insufficiently so to support a fresh rally in USDJPY. The MOVE index of US yield volatility, in fact, has declined to a post-late-2021 low. If we recall, the November 2021 time frame saw Powell-Brainard acceptance speeches for nomination as Fed Chair and Vice Chair pointed to the coming Fed war on inflation.  This sparked a long period of higher interest rate volatility. Ironically, this interest rate volatility is now on the decline when the longer term questions about the long-term pressures on sovereign bond markets in the US, Japan, UK and elsewhere are more burning than ever. Longer term, direction for USDJPY will be driven by the policy options taken by both Japan’s Ministry of Finance/BoJ and the US Fed/US Treasury. Technically, the 12 days of going nowhere after the monumental reversal from the squeeze above 150.00 has weakened, if not yet eliminated, the implications of that reversal. We need to take out perhaps 146.00 or 149.00 on a daily close together with a policy move or expanding volatility from global bond markets to get a sense that we establishing a new trend.

19_08_2025_USDJPY
Source: Saxo

RBNZ decision – inflation or labor market?
As the RBNZ is widely expected to cut the policy rate 25 basis points to 3.00% tonight and only one further rate cut is priced into the forward curve, guidance from the RBNZ will be crucial on whether it would like to pause for now to assess whether further easing is needed (hawkish) or to keep the door open in the event the economy and especially labor market continue to weaken. The bank has indicated concern on the impacts of US tariffs, so I would expect that growth concerns could outweigh some signs of an uptick in inflation and the bank could keep the path open to further rate cuts beyond today, but perhaps the risks are more two way than I see them. In any case, the AUDNZD cross is certainly caught in the range between 1.0885 and 1.0995 for more than a month and this is the first best change to provoke a directional move in a while.


FX Board of G10 and CNH trend evolution and strength
Note: If unfamiliar with the FX board, please see a video tutorial for understanding and using the FX Board.

The ATR rankings are turning deep blue to indicated “very low” daily trading ranges of late for all of the G10 small currencies and CHF, while the rest are in the “low” classification. We need some reheating and impulsiveness in some of the daily moves to get a sense of new vigor in FX here.

19_08_2025_FXBoard_Main
Source: Bloomberg and Saxo Group

Table: NEW FX Board Trend Scoreboard for individual pairs.
EURSEK is making a bid to get interesting to the downside by poking at two-week lows today but needs a bit more and Riksbank is up tomorrow (low expectations for a rate cut). The EURGBP “downtrend” is unconfirmed relative to the scale of the prior June-July rally and would be easy to reverse as long at the recent lows hold.

19_08_2025_FXBoard_Individuals
Source: Bloomberg and Saxo Group
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