The US Dollar Could Gain Strength Following the Fed’s Turmoil

Yesterday, the US CPI came in weaker than anticipated, supporting our prediction of a Fed rate cut in March. However, we expect the market to take a few more weeks before fully embracing this outlook. The US dollar could recover more than its recent losses, possibly driven by a hawkish stance following the Powell criminal investigation. In the meantime, we’ll continue to watch the Japanese yen closely today, along with developments in the Greenland discussions.

USD: We Maintain a Short-Term Optimistic Outlook

US inflation came in softer than consensus and well below our expected 0.4% month-on-month core reading. Yet, yesterday’s market reaction actually reinforced our short-term positive outlook on the dollar: despite the weak CPI data, Fed rate expectations barely shifted, and the dollar quickly regained strength.

This may partly be due to market caution in over-interpreting the CPI figures amid ongoing shutdown-related distortions. It also indicates that concerns about the Fed’s independence are diminishing, helped by expectations that the criminal probe into Chair Powell may not advance much further and opposition from some GOP lawmakers. We believe there’s a fair chance the dollar will ultimately come out stronger from this situation, as Powell might adopt a more firmly hawkish stance to assert Fed independence.

Additionally, the key message from yesterday’s CPI report is the continued softness in goods prices, highlighting how limited the tariff effects on inflation have been. Several tariff-sensitive categories remained weak, including appliances (-4.3% MoM), furniture (-0.4%), new vehicles (0.0%), and video and audio equipment (-0.4%). This clear trend suggests US retailers are still squeezing their margins. Overall, this strengthens our confidence in a Fed rate cut in March, although it may take time for markets to fully accept this outlook.

Today, focus shifts to November’s PPI, with core PPI expected to rise by 0.2% month-on-month, and retail sales, which are anticipated to remain fairly strong. A busy lineup of Fed speakers—including Paulson, Miran, Kashkari, Bostic, and Williams—will be closely watched for any subtle hawkish signals in support of Powell and the Fed’s independence.

Additionally, the Supreme Court is expected to issue a ruling on tariffs today, likely unfavorable. If that happens, significant noise from the Trump administration is expected, though markets are unlikely to be caught off guard. Our baseline expectation is for a mildly positive reaction in the dollar.

EUR: Greenland Discussions Likely to Have Limited Market Impact

A US delegation, including JD Vance and Marco Rubio, is scheduled to meet today with officials from Denmark and Greenland. So far, US threats related to Greenland have had minimal impact on markets—limited mostly to some movements in EUR/DKK forwards—meaning there’s little risk premium to be unwound even if the talks lead to a cooperative outcome. Nevertheless, any progress could help eliminate a lingering geopolitical “black swan” risk for European currencies.

There seems to be potential for an agreement, likely based on the US abandoning any claims of “ownership” over Greenland—a stance firmly rejected by both Denmark and Greenland—in exchange for enhanced economic partnerships and a greater US military presence.

Positive headlines from the talks might ease the EUR/USD’s recent decline slightly, but we still expect the pair to approach 1.1600 in the near term.

JPY: Approaching the 160 Level for a Key Test

The USD/JPY rally shows no signs of slowing. Rising speculation about snap elections is bringing back a political risk premium, giving another push to test Japan’s currency tolerance band. Meanwhile, ongoing diplomatic tensions between Japan and China are adding more momentum to the move.

On Monday, we viewed 160 as a key upside target. While intervention concerns may slow the rally near that level, it increasingly looks like 160 will eventually be tested. Recall that in July 2024, Japan allowed the pair to surpass 160 and only intervened when it neared 162. Pinpointing the exact intervention level is tricky, but since the BoJ hasn’t acted sooner, it’s reasonable to expect they’ll wait until the pair exceeds 160.

For context, the first intervention on July 11, 2024, led to a 1.8% drop in USD/JPY. Interestingly, back then, CFTC net non-commercial positions on the yen were at -52% of open interest, whereas now they are 3% net-long, despite spot price action suggesting otherwise.

The crucial question is whether FX interventions alone can sustain a USD/JPY recovery. Historically, they haven’t. In 2024, interventions curtailed short-term gains but the subsequent USD/JPY decline was driven mainly by a sharp 50bp drop in US 2-year swap rates over the next month. That scenario seems unlikely now, and with snap election risks ongoing, markets remain hesitant to price in a BoJ rate hike before summer.

Sources: ING

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