Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Chief Investment Strategist
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The narrative of a soft landing continues to shape the outlook for the USD, leaning on the weaker side. Recent US data has pointed toward this scenario, which is USD-negative, and the upcoming jobs report is likely to reaffirm this trend. The bar for a hawkish surprise is high, while a somewhat weak headline jobs growth could propel markets to price in another 50bps rate cut from the Fed in November. Meanwhile, China's stimulus measures are boosting global risk appetite, adding further downside pressure on the USD.
This week will also feature remarks from several Fed members, including Chair Powell and the dissent voter Bowman. However, with the dot plot has already laid out the variance of views in Fed's expected path forward, and the commentary is unlikely to break this confusion. Focus remains heavily tilted toward key data points, especially Friday’s nonfarm payrolls but also ISM manufacturing and services PMIs. September's NFP is expected to show 145k new jobs, with the unemployment rate steady at 4.2%, and average hourly earnings growth easing slightly. Before that, Tuesday's ISM Manufacturing and Thursday's ISM Non-Manufacturing PMIs will be scrutinized for signs of how the US economy wrapped up Q3.
For the USD to sustain any gains, both the jobs report and ISM data would need to exceed expectations. However, the odds are stacked toward a balanced, but dovish, outcome, meaning the dollar may struggle to hold ground if the data confirms the soft-landing narrative.
In Friday's election, Shigeru Ishiba emerged victorious as the ruling party leader in a run-off against dovish candidate Sanae Takaichi, signaling a potential shift in Japan’s economic stance. Ishiba has voiced support for the Bank of Japan’s independence and its normalization strategy, suggesting a firmer focus on tackling deflation. His election could mark a turning point in monetary policy discussions, with the new Prime Minister reportedly planning a general election on October 27.
This leadership change adds a layer of uncertainty for JPY, as markets will look closely at Ishiba's approach to monetary policy and how it aligns with the BoJ's potential hawkish shift. As much as politics and central banks should be independent, there is a fair chance that Ishiba-san’s hawkish comments could feed into BOJ’s policy thinking. We still expect caution on further policy hikes after August’s Black Monday, but wage-price spiral suggests that the BOJ has room to normalize policy further. With the yen already benefiting from lower oil prices, Fed’s 50bps rate cut, and the possibility of BoJ rate hikes, Ishiba’s election win could accelerate bullish sentiment on JPY, especially against currencies like the EUR, where expectations for further rate cuts are firmer.
The outlook for commodity currencies like AUD, NZD, and CAD has shifted with China’s recent stimulus, adding to the positive narrative already building from the Fed's soft-landing scenario, with a 50bps rate cut at the September meeting. However, CAD has been the underperformer, with the Canadian economy facing hard-landing risks. Inflation returned to the 2% target in August, and markets still expect more rate cuts from the BoC, adding to CAD’s downside pressure.
Meanwhile, the RBA has pushed any potential rate cut discussion to 2025, while the RBNZ appears overpriced, with markets forecasting 90bps of cuts over the next two meetings before year-end. CAD’s underperformance may continue for now, especially until US election risks could start to take a larger role in markets. CAD faces fewer tariff risks compared to the other commodity currencies, and its fate could turn if a Republican victory becomes more likely in the US elections.
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