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US dollar edges down before Fed speakers, data; Swiss franc rises after SNB

September 26, 2024
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US dollar edges down before Fed speakers, data; Swiss franc rises after SNB
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THE safe-haven US dollar edged down on Thursday (Sep 26) on increasing risk appetite with traders looking ahead to speeches from key Federal Reserve policymakers and economic data for clues on the pace of interest rate cuts.

Meanwhile, the Swiss franc rose after the Swiss National Bank cut interest rates by 25 basis points. Future markets and some analysts expected a bigger cut of 50 bps after the Federal Reserve made such a move last week.

European and Asian stocks extended a China-led rally, fuelled by optimism over the country’s aggressive stimulus package and news that more support could be in the works.

“These days, in the forex market, it’s all about the Federal Reserve monetary path and US economic data,” said Nick Andrews, forex strategist at HSBC.

The dollar rebounded sharply overnight from its lowest levels in over 14 months. It tumbled on Tuesday after data showed that US consumer confidence dropped by the most in three years in September amid mounting fears over the labour market, increasing market bets on Fed rate cuts.

“Beijing (stimulus plan) has juiced the markets during what was otherwise a typically quiet day ahead of US data,” said Matt Simpson, senior market analyst at City Index.

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The dollar index, which measures the currency against the euro, sterling, yen and three other major peers, eased 0.2 per cent to 100.73, following a 0.57 per cent jump on Wednesday, its biggest one-day gain since Jun 7.

Mark Haefele, chief investment officer at UBS Global Wealth Management, sees a weak dollar as the Fed will lower rates at a faster pace than its peers.

The Swiss franc rose 0.4 per cent versus the dollar to 0.8468, after the SNB decision and was up 0.25 per cent at 0.9442 versus the euro.

Markets had priced in a 55 per cent probability of a 25 basis point cut before the announcement.

SNB chairman Thomas Jordan said the central bank was ready to cut rates again and recently acknowledged difficulties that the recent rise in the franc has created for exporters.

“This 25 bps rate cut is the most dovish you could ask for,” said Charlotte de Montpellier, senior economist at ING.

“Not only is the SNB making it very clear that further rate cuts may be necessary, but it has also revised its inflation forecasts very sharply downwards.”

The euro rose 0.13 per cent to US$1.1148, after pulling back from US$1.1214, a high not seen since July last year.

Some analysts said a better outlook for Chinese demand after the stimulus plan announcement fed back into expectations for the economies of Germany and, more broadly, Europe.

The yen hit a three-week low of 145.04 per dollar and last fetched 144.56.

Investors were closely watching political developments as the Liberal Democratic Party will choose a new leader on Friday, with the winner due to take over as prime minister due to the party’s majority in parliament.

A win for Sanae Takaichi would have the biggest impact on the yen’s performance as she favours maintaining a loose BOJ policy and a weaker yen.

“One reason the yen weakened a little is the uncertainty about LDP elections, which start tomorrow; a Takaichi win could be quite reflationary,” HSBC’s Andrews argued.

MUFG estimated a probability of 20 per cent for Sanae Takaichi to win and of 45 per cent for Shinjiro Koizumi, adding that it was unlikely that one candidate would secure a majority in the first round.

Minutes from the Bank of Japan’s July meeting, when the central bank raised short-term interest rates, showed policymakers were divided on how quickly the central bank should raise rates further.

The Australian dollar added 0.75 per cent to US$0.6873, finding its feet after Wednesday’s one per cent retreat from a 19-month peak of US$0.6908.

The Chinese yuan rose 0.46 per cent to 7 per dollar in offshore trading after it pulled back on Wednesday from its highest since May of last year at 6.9952. REUTERS



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Tags: dataDollarEdgesFedfrancRisesSNBSpeakersSwiss
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