Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Chief Macro Strategist
Summary: The FOMC is set to deliver a 25 basis point rate hike today, with guidance the chief focus, especially the degree to which Fed Chair Powell pushes back against expectations for a significant rate easing cycle to begin already ahead of year end. With or without a more hawkish message from the FOMC, incoming data is critical. Tomorrow set to see the ECB confirming hawkish expectations, while the Bank of England is more complicated.
Today's Saxo Market Call podcast.
Today's Market Quick Take from the Saxo Strategy Team
FX Trading focus: FOMC: Powell set to push back against market’s complacent expectations, but will need to pull a big surprise to get respect unless data conveniently strong. SEK pain continues despite normally supportive backdrop – what gives?
Please refer to the FOMC, ECB and Bank of England previews in the latest excellent piece from Charu Chanana, our strategist in Singapore Charu. We are mostly on the same page and I don’t have much to add to her thoughts. One key consideration, however, both for what the Fed and Fed Chair Powell actually deliver today in the monetary policy statement and the press conference, is the quality of incoming data, not only the data this week, but the CPI data point on the 14th. Yes, inflation has faded as a focus in the US with the recent couple of data points, but the new methodology, if it sees a far lower contribution from the largest and very badly lagging component of CPI, Owner Equivalent Rent, could see an even more rapid deceleration in CPI in the coming few months.
Until then, a hawkish Fed with upside surprise in earnings and payrolls and especially ISM Services that all combine to backup the Fed’s message are the most USD supportive (outside of real hawkish surprises as outlined below), while the least USD supportive is a monetary policy statement that still points to an imminent pause after a bit more hiking, followed by weak pushback with nothing to back it up from Fed Chair Powell, and then in-line to slightly weaker or much weaker data.
Outside of rhetorical protestations at the post-FOMC , the Fed can surprise on the hawkish side and reverse the aggressive easing in financial conditions in perhaps three ways, in relative order from most hawkish to less hawkish:
A large hike. The least likely surprise would be a larger than expected rate increase – 50 basis points or even something cheeky like a 37.5% hike to take the rate to 4.75%, abandoning the quarter point upper and lower bound silliness that is a relic of ZIRP days.
Something on the balance sheet. Somewhat hazy here, but if the Fed points to new ways that it will seek to adjust its balance sheet reduction to engineer longer rates higher to ensure tightening financial conditions, this could come as a significant surprise and could give risk assets a bloody nose and boost the greenback.
Refusing to guide for a pause and pointing explicitly to financial conditions as a factor in Fed decision to pause. This is perhaps the most likely course for the Fed to take to make its point, as it would force the market to recognize that as long as financial conditions are exceptionally easy, the Fed may continue hiking for now, only seen failing to do so if, for example, credit spreads were to tighten and financial conditions likewise as weak data points to a sharply weakening economy.
Chart: GBPUSD
The GBPUSD rally found resistance near the prior major high near 1.2450 as it awaits the FOMC and BoE meetings today and tomorrow. Thoughts on the Fed above, but the Bank of England can surprise significantly today as well, with perhaps far more potential to do so on the dovish side, given the weak (if now less dire) outlook and stabilization of the currency in recent weeks and the huge drop in energy prices. The market is pricing the BoE to deliver about another 60 basis points of hiking beyond the 50 basis points expected tomorrow. While EU-US 2-year spreads are at a 15-month highs, the UK-US spread has eased lower since mid-December. The USD is likely in the driver’s seat as the prime mover, but BoE surprises could add some mustard to the move in either direction.
Elsewhere, one of the most prominent trends in FX outside of the strong Aussie, which has been driven by a resurgence in industrial commodities as Chinese demand is seen returning post pandemic, is the very weak Swedish krona. The krona is traditionally correlated with a strong outlook for the European/global economy and is one of the most sensitive currencies to risk sentiment. One driver here seems to be the concern that the Riksbank expressed yesterday that the steep advance in rate hikes risk system pressure on Sweden’s financial system. Yesterday, Sweden reported a 47% rise in bankruptcies for January relative to a year ago, with 130 construction companies going under and restaurants, hotels and retail also under pressure. Sweden’s banks aren’t yet under any pressure, soaring with European peers on the tailwind of higher yields, but the Riksbank concern adds to yield spreads continuing to tilt in the Euro’s favour: the 2-year EU swap is 17 basis points higher than Sweden’s up from negative 125 basis points about six months ago as the Riksbank was an earlier mover and is now seen as soft-pedaling further rate increases after next week’s 50 basis point move higher.
Table: FX Board of G10 and CNH trend evolution and strength.
Let’s see where our trending indicators stand on the close on Friday before drawing conclusions. Absolute values are extremely low here, reflecting significant uncertainty after a strong trending move in the US dollar lower that has lost some momentum and is either seeking confirmation or a reversal.
Table: FX Board Trend Scoreboard for individual pairs.
Some interesting new downtrends signaled in select NZD crosses after weak housing data and as AUDNZD approaches 1.1000 and the 200-day moving average. Otherwise we await the lay of the land into the end of the week after the three key central bank meetings and US data.
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