USD in the crosshairs

The USD bear case awaits confirmation.

Forex 6 minutes to read
John J. Hardy

Global Head of Macro Strategy

Summary:  The drop in US yields has helped engineer a USDJPY breakdown, now we watch the broader USD picture for whether we get further signs that the USD bear case is playing out.


Tariffs, tariffs, tariffs.
The fuss coming into this week outside a lopsided Super Bowl victory for the Philadelphia Eagles is over the latest Trump tariff announcements as he threatened 25% tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports. The steel imports are rather minor, as steel imports make up less than 15% of US steel consumption. The aluminum imports are another matter, as the US imports over half of its consumption, suggesting that if this is followed through, the US sees it as a matter of national economic security that it ensures greater domestic production. As usual, many details are lacking, but 25% steel and 10% aluminum import tariffs are already in place from Trump’s first administration, with many subsequent exceptions for the EU, Canada and Mexico and other countries carved out. Canada is a big focus on whether Trump follows through here, as the US imports some 40% of its supplies from the country. So far the market is taking the news quite calmly after an initial spike in USD strength on the open.

Watching for the US dollar bear case to spread beyond USDJPY
As outlined in part in my prior update and on our more recent Saxo Market Call podcast, the USD bear case can be made if the Trump administration and US Secretary of Treasury Scott Bessent make good on cutting US fiscal outlays to a sufficient degree to rein in US deficits, which also risks tilting the country into a recession later this year. As fiscal excess has been a strong contributor to US growth outperformance, fiscal drag would do the opposite before the hoped for growth boost from deregulation and possibly tax reform delivers growth perhaps in 2026 or beyond. It does appear between the lines that the Trump administration understands the need to get the country’s finances in order. But it is the tallest of tasks – the biggest spending is on interest/debt-service and basic non-discretionary items that are politically toxic to touch, especially Social Security. Medicare and Medicaid are a bit more interesting if the Trump team takes the approach of strong-arming drug- and healthcare providers to lower their prices. Federal tax revenue for 2024, a stellar year for capital gains tax revenue due to soaring equity markets, is estimated at USD 4.9 trillion, but with spending outlays of USD 6.8 trillion.

Timing the above scenario could prove difficult and there are only halting signs of a turn in the US dollar thus far, with USDJPY the only major USD pairs that has executed a convincing bearish turn (thus far – needs to stay below perhaps 156.00 and Bessent needs to deliver on keeping that 10-year US treasury yield tamed.) Below we look at what EURUSD will have to do to suggest a larger turn in the US dollar is under way. AUDUSD is a bit closer, by the way, with an interesting pop in key commodities price like copper supporting the Aussie.

A further complicating factor is the threat of Trump tariffs and trade war fears, which can buffet the market from headline to headline. I believe that the Trump team’s chief aim is to ensure economic security and self-sufficiency in key industries as a national security priority and to force its neighbors north and south of the border to help the US in a new drug war and to reduce China’s influence, from contributing illegal drug chemicals to the US drug crisis to its economic and political footprint in the Americas in general, a kind of new Monroe Doctrine. At the same time, the intent is to allow Europe to fend for itself more by withdrawing the bulk of the US commitment to the post-WWII security umbrella over Europe. That means targeted tariffs and tariffs as a negotiating tool rather than broad tariffs or a trade war.

Elsewhere, the fiscal needle generally points in the direction of more expansion, especially on national and economic security imperatives in Europe that follow on from the above, which will expand further if the EU contributes to the rebuilding of Ukraine on an assumed cease-fire/armistice scenario. Another potential contributor to the US dollar losing steam this year is any reversal in Mag 7 stocks and the AI-driven story if momentum in the sector falters more broadly after the recent Nvidia stumble.

Chart: EURUSD
EURUSD tried to post a climax reversal on Trump’s recent 25% tariff threat against Mexico and Canada that was then quickly punted for a month. The rejection of the sub-1.0200 lows was swift, but the back-filling here keeps the suspense high on whether this was a real reversal or mere headline-driven volatility. First steps for bulls will be a close well north of 1.0400 to stabilize the recent softness, but the 1.0500-1.0600 zone marks the key zone that decides the trending status for the pair. The top of that zone was near the 2024 low. To the downside, a close below 1.0300 keeps the risk in place that the pair tests the cycle lows again.

Source: Saxo

Odds and ends

  • The January US jobs report Friday saw US treasury yields pop on the apparent strength in both the household survey used to calculate the unemployment rate, which dropped to 3.9% versus 4.1% expected and 4.1% in December. The average hourly earnings number rising to 4.1% versus 3.8% YoY expected and a revision of the December earnings growth to 4.1% from 3.9% perhaps raised eyebrows as well. But a couple of points: the payrolls data through March 2024 was revised down some 589,000 jobs, and the average weekly hours worked fell to its lowest level since 2010 (March 2020 excepted), impacting the denominator used to calculate that earnings figure.
  • Key US event risks for the week ahead: US Fed Chair Powell to testify before Senate panel tomorrow and House panel on Wednesday. US January CPI on Wednesday, US 10-year T-note auction on Wednesday and 30-year T-bond auction on Thursday. US January Retail Sales on Friday.
  • The Bank of England meeting delivered an apparent dovish cut on the headlines with the two dovish dissenters and a weaker growth outlook, but the concerns of a medium-term inflation backup kept the market from pricing in more easing this year - a setback for sterling bears (like me).
  • Last week looked like a watershed week for the Scandies, as both SEK and NOK have powered higher out of the ranges versus the Euro. At the margin this suggests some are taking a stronger bet on the outlook for the European economy, where the Swedish and Norwegian economies leveraged to any new EU-wide fiscal impulse and growth outperformance.

Table: FX Board of G10 and CNH trend evolution and strength.
Note: the FX Board trend indicators are only on a relative scale and are volatility adjusted. Readings below an absolute value of 2 are fairly weak, while a reading above 3 is quite strong and above 6 very strong.

JPY strength and SEK strength stick out on the positive side, while the USD trend status is uncertain and the euro remains weak. Gold strength is back to an extremely robust 7.5, a very rare level to achieve.

Source: Bloomberg and Saxo Group

Table: FX Board Trend Scoreboard for individual pairs.

An impressive reading in the still quite young EURSEK trend of -7.3, while all JPY pairs are trending lower, even SEKJPY. Elsewhere - watching AUDNZD for whether we finally get a range break to confirm a bullish trend.

Source: Bloomberg and Saxo Group

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