Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Chief Macro Strategist
Summary: The US dollar gapped lower to start trading this week on the news that Trump will pick Scott Bessent for Treasury Secretary, a critical post for policy. Also, the very weak euro and whether a low is in for now.
The US dollar has jumped higher out of the gates as we have turned the page on a new calendar month, suggesting that Friday’s big dip and local low in US treasury yields, coupled with a weaker US dollar were a product of end-of-month portfolio rebalancing and rate fixing and not signs of something bigger developing. Friday’s USD lows are certainly now an important technical chart point, particularly in EURUSD as discussed below. The USDJPY action was particularly revealing, as USDJPY leaped back above 150.50 at one point in early European trading this morning after closing Friday at 149.63 despite Ueda suggesting that a BoJ rate hike is “nearing” and JGB yield jumping higher to start the week. Elsewhere, USDCNH jumping to new local highs may have been a key USD driver here as China’s 10-year yield dipped below 2% for the first time since 2002 and observers noted a failure by the politburo to comment on its recent meeting as key mid-December meetings lie ahead. 7.31-37 is the last bit of the range, versus 7.28 as of this writing.
Below, we have a look at the key data points in the week ahead, with everyone wondering how much the US data should even be weighed for now, given that global markets are bracing for the impact of a Trump 2.0 administration. Elsewhere, watching how the Euro might deal with a government collapse in France as Le Pen has thrown down the gauntlet and we could risk a Wednesday no-confidence vote, with zero visibility on what shapes up for the country politically if the fragile minority government is taken down.
Chart: EURUSD
The final trading day of November saw critical levels tested in EURUSD, namely the major early 2024 low near 1.0600 that was broken earlier in the month. The brutal run lower saw the pair briefly testing below the prior major low from 2023 near 1.0450. While the size of the descent from the 1.1200 sell-off and even the second wave sell-off from above 1.0900 suggest that a move to 1.0700 or even higher wouldn’t threaten the downtrend in a local context, the 1.0600 old range low nonetheless remains one critical potential bull-bear line level to watch in coming days and through to year-end. The opening today is a comfort for the EURUSD bears as it suggests that the USD weakness in thin US trading late in the Thanksgiving holiday week may have been on end-of-month fixing.
In technical developments, last week’s most interesting beside the EURUSD 1.0600 test and the JPY generally cementing its bullish trending status was perhaps the sharp reversal in AUDNZD on the back of the RBNZ meeting, which delivered the expected 50-basis point cut and promised more to come, if only “provisionally” on data. This looks to have put a firm cap on the AUDNZD after the climax reversal rejected all of the price action above 1.1100-1.1150. Given that hawkish RBA chief Bullock is doing all she can to hold up the Aussie, it would appear that only large-scale Chinese stimulus that boosts the prospects for Australia’s key commodities exports would support a change of view on the AUD. The AUDUSD chart has worked into the extremely important support zone that stretches down to sub-0.6200 levels, although there is arguably an important trend line that currently comes in around 0.6400.
Top highlights for the week ahead: (times are GMT where shown):
The week ahead features most of the most important data going into the December 18 FOMC meeting, including especially Friday’s jobs report.
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.
A powerful Japanese yen reading dominates the FX Board trend readings – judging from the overnight action, it certainly helps the JPY bulls for yields to continue to consolidate lower globally independent of BoJ hike anticipation. The Euro is the weakest major currency as we watch French politics this week.
Table: FX Board Trend Scoreboard for individual pairs.
The volatility (hot ATR readings) only found in the precious metals and in the JPY pairs, although USDCNH heating up again with today’s session as we all ponder China’s policy moves as counterpoint to whatever Trump 2.0 delivers.