The April FOMC meeting concludes on Wednesday 29 April and the FOMC statement is released at 20:00 CET. There will be no press conference or updated projections.

The tone of the speeches since the March meeting has been mixed, but the most relevant speakers, Fed Chair Janet Yellen, New York Fed President William Dudley and Vice- Chairman Stanley Fischer, have in general signalled that they expect current weakness in US data to be partly temporary. However, in particular, Dudley has been clear that the recent run of data has increased the uncertainty around the outlook for growth this year. We expect the statement to acknowledge the weakness in recent data but to emphasise that the Committee still views the soft patch in US growth as caused at least in part by temporary factors.

While activity data has been weak, inflation data has surprised on the upside with core CPI up 0.2% m/m in both February and March and PCE core inflation (the preferred measure by the FOMC) set to post a similar trend. The statement is thus likely to note that inflation has stabilised lately.

We expect the statement to leave the paragraph on the economic outlook unchanged and repeat that The Committee anticipates that it will be appropriate to raise the target range for the federal funds rate when it has seen further improvement in the labor market and is reasonably confident that inflation will move back to its 2 percent objective over the medium term. The FOMC would like to break completely free of calendar-based rate guidance and we do not expect the paragraph that an April hike is unlikely to be replaced with guidance on what to expect for the coming meeting on 16-17 June.

Although the changes to the language are not major, we could see an upward move in rates following the statement. During March, market participants have adjusted their expectations of a first fed funds rate hike from October to December/January as data has continued to disappoint. If the FOMC downplays the weakness in data, as we expect, and acknowledges the latest stabilisation in core inflation, we believe the statement will push US rates higher and data released over the coming week should also work in that direction (see Weekly Focus: Riksbanken to add fuel to the currency war).

We are currently awaiting the next and likely final leg of USD strength and the FOMC this week could sow the seeds for this. Currently, investors appear somewhat reluctant to buy into more dollar upside following recent weak US data and stretched long USD positioning. The FOMC will likely in itself not be enough to trigger more than a temporary blip in EUR/USD though. As we have argued previously, we probably need to see surprise indices shift clearly in favour of the US vs. the euro area for EUR/USD to initiate a trip to below parity as we call for in six months. The FX market will clearly stay alert to any Fed comments on the USD but if we are right that the FOMC will signal that it is not taking part in a currency war, the scene is set for a healthy April payrolls report to become the catalyst for a EUR/USD sell-off. We are short EUR/USD in our Danske FX Trading Portfolio, see Danske Bank FX Trading Portfolio: Sell EUR/USD.

This publication has been prepared by Danske Bank for information purposes only. It is not an offer or solicitation of any offer to purchase or sell any financial instrument. Whilst reasonable care has been taken to ensure that its contents are not untrue or misleading, no representation is made as to its accuracy or completeness and no liability is accepted for any loss arising from reliance on it. Danske Bank, its affiliates or staff, may perform services for, solicit business from, hold long or short positions in, or otherwise be interested in the investments (including derivatives), of any issuer mentioned herein. Danske Bank's research analysts are not permitted to invest in securities under coverage in their research sector.
This publication is not intended for private customers in the UK or any person in the US. Danske Bank A/S is regulated by the FSA for the conduct of designated investment business in the UK and is a member of the London Stock Exchange.
Copyright () Danske Bank A/S. All rights reserved. This publication is protected by copyright and may not be reproduced in whole or in part without permission.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD turns negative near 1.0760

EUR/USD turns negative near 1.0760

The sudden bout of strength in the Greenback sponsored the resurgence of the selling pressure in the risk complex, dragging EUR/USD to the area of daily lows near 1.0760.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD comes under pressure and challenges 1.2500

GBP/USD comes under pressure and challenges 1.2500

GBP/USD now rapidly loses momentum and gives away initial gains, returning to the 1.2500 region on the back of the strong comeback of the US Dollar.

GBP/USD News

Gold retreats from highs on stronger Dollar, yields

Gold retreats from highs on stronger Dollar, yields

XAU/USD trims part of its initial advance in response to the jump in the Dollar's buying interest and the re-emergence of the upside pressure in US yields.

Gold News

XRP tests support at $0.50 as Ripple joins alliance to work on blockchain recovery

XRP tests support at $0.50 as Ripple joins alliance to work on blockchain recovery

XRP trades around $0.5174 early on Friday, wiping out gains from earlier in the week, as Ripple announced it has joined an alliance to support digital asset recovery alongside Hedera and the Algorand Foundation. 

Read more

Week ahead – US inflation numbers to shake Fed rate cut bets

Week ahead – US inflation numbers to shake Fed rate cut bets

Fed rate-cut speculators rest hopes on US inflation data. After dovish BoE, pound traders turn to UK job numbers. Will a strong labor market convince the RBA to hike? More Chinese data on tap amid signs of slow Q2 start.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures