Minutes matter as FX market eyes the Fed's quiet pivot
|The FX market has rotated squarely back to the macro mainsail, hoisting its compass once again toward the Fed and fundamentals. Tariffs may still color the horizon, but traders are reading them more like weather warnings than storm catalysts—unless lightning actually strikes.
All eyes now turn to tonight’s June FOMC minutes, which will function less as a rearview mirror and more as a barometer: how dovish is the Committee really, beneath the surface rhetoric? The dollar has been adrift, unable to find a consistent wind, as the Fed's tone continues to set the tempo more than trade tweets or tariff tableaus. If the minutes reveal a softer core—more widespread dovish leanings than just Waller and Bowman’s post-meeting musings—then the bar for a summer cut lowers, and the dollar could spring a leak.
Markets are broadly discounting Trump’s tariff drumbeat as more theater than threat, with most positioning built around the assumption that these are leverage plays—not enduring policy pivots. The FX market hears the snare rolls, but won’t flinch unless the cymbals crash. That puts the dollar in a kind of tactical limbo: waiting for CPI next Tuesday to truly mark a directional path, while tonight’s minutes could tilt sentiment if they reveal more dovish consensus than currently priced.
As for the tariffs themselves, they’re playing out more as cross-currency differentiators than dollar disruptors. In Asia, this manifests in asymmetric pressure: the yen faces renewed political risk from Tokyo’s pre-election stance and Trump’s targeted rhetoric, while the peso quietly benefits from capital rotation away from higher-tariff neighbors. Copper’s explosive rally overnight—a tariff-fueled melt-up—could ripple more significantly through FX pairs exposed to the industrial metals complex than through the broad dollar index.
In Europe, EUR/USD seems to have dropped anchor around 1.17, caught between a dollar still buoyed by residual rate premium and a eurozone outlook complicated by tariff uncertainty. The spread in 2-year swap differentials has narrowed only slightly, and without a strong catalyst, this pair is likely to continue idling or running in circles between 1.16 and 1.18.
Trump says his tariff letter to the EU is “two days off.” But unless it comes with an unexpected sting, EUR/USD may be more inclined to tread water than tumble. A tariff broadside on the EU might dent the euro, but could just as easily backfire into the dollar if it feeds safe haven demand or Fed recalibration. For now, the base case remains that cooler heads will prevail before August 1.
This is a market hunting for clarity—not in policy threats, but in policy follow-through. Until then, the dollar’s journey is less a breakout and more a drift—charting tides, not tsunamis.
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