Outlook:

We are still stunned and confused about a dovish Fed statement and a hawkish rate projection chart. The FT says the conflict has made us all “dotty.” The dot-plot is more readable at the FT than the WSJ, by the way. The FT notes that the dot-plot shows the Fed members see rates higher, sooner and the bond market does not. The Fed sees the Fed funds rate at 1.375% by end-2015 while the bond market gets 0.76%. For end-2016, the Fed sees 2.875% while the bond market gets 1.82%. The FT doesn’t disclose where it gets its market forecast.

So why did Yellen say she doesn’t give much credence to the San Francisco Fed’s study last week showing precisely this kind of divergence between the Fed and the market? An analyst at RBS told the FT “The bond market is still underpricing the Fed and needs to correct. The Fed is moving towards a less dovish statement and over time yields will rise leading to a flatter curve.”

It takes a minute to digest that “flatter curve” idea, but he is right—after the whole curve shifts upward, it should be flatter. The FT doesn’t miss the opportunity to point out that the equity gang might be in for an unhappy surprise.

On recent experience, the statement should count for more. That means the dollar should be softer. And yet a breakout is always to be respected, and the euro in particular has its own tough row to hoe. What happens next? We have to watch out for a break of the broken support line, which becomes a form of resistance. This is more honored in the breach than in the letter, but never mind. The danger points lies at around 1.2930 today. So far it looks like it will not get broken.

The calendar today includes housing starts, the Philly Fed, money supply and Fed balance sheet, and the usual Thursday jobless claims. Looming over it all is the Scottish referendum. We probably won’t get US-style talking heads and graphics on TV, more’s the pity. The FT has a detailed section on each council and when its tally can be expected (“When to expect what”). This will probably be a better source than TV, in the US, anyway. It ain’t over until the fat lady sings. We hope the Scots give the UK a comeuppance and to hell with the fiscal stuff.

Net-net, we like the dollar against the other majors and we still think the pound will slide backwards after the referendum, no matter the outcome.

This morning FX briefing is an information service, not a trading system. All trade recommendations are included in the afternoon report.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD fluctuates near 1.0700 after US data

EUR/USD fluctuates near 1.0700 after US data

EUR/USD stays in a consolidation phase at around 1.0700 in the American session on Wednesday. The data from the US showed a strong increase in Durable Goods Orders, supporting the USD and making it difficult for the pair to gain traction.

EUR/USD News

USD/JPY refreshes 34-year high, attacks 155.00 as intervention risks loom

USD/JPY refreshes 34-year high, attacks 155.00 as intervention risks loom

USD/JPY is renewing a multi-decade high, closing in on 155.00. Traders turn cautious on heightened risks of Japan's FX intervention. Broad US Dollar rebound aids the upside in the major. US Durable Goods data are next on tap. 

USD/JPY News

Gold keeps consolidating ahead of US first-tier figures

Gold keeps consolidating ahead of US first-tier figures

Gold finds it difficult to stage a rebound midweek following Monday's sharp decline but manages to hold above $2,300. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield stays in the green above 4.6% after US data, not allowing the pair to turn north.

Gold News

Worldcoin looks set for comeback despite Nvidia’s 22% crash Premium

Worldcoin looks set for comeback despite Nvidia’s 22% crash

Worldcoin price is in a better position than last week's and shows signs of a potential comeback. This development occurs amid the sharp decline in the valuation of the popular GPU manufacturer Nvidia.

Read more

Three fundamentals for the week: US GDP, BoJ and the Fed's favorite inflation gauge stand out Premium

Three fundamentals for the week: US GDP, BoJ and the Fed's favorite inflation gauge stand out

While it is hard to predict when geopolitical news erupts, the level of tension is lower – allowing for key data to have its say. This week's US figures are set to shape the Federal Reserve's decision next week – and the Bank of Japan may struggle to halt the Yen's deterioration. 

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures