- Fed Chair Powell has opened the door to rate cuts and weighed on the USD.
- Five critical dovish points accumulate to a bleak picture.
- EUR/USD has jumped from the lows and faces a new technical setup.
Markets have been expecting the Federal Reserve to cut rates for several weeks – and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell more than confirmed it – sending the dollar down.
Five dovish downers
1) Dim outlook: Powell described how uncertainties since June's Fed decision have continued dimming the economic outlook. Moreover, back then, there were only "many" but not "most" members wanting a rate cut, and now things have deteriorated. His words imply a cut is coming.
2) Uncertainties about trade: The Fed Chair seems unconvinced about the trade truce reached by President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping. While the central-banker refrained from commenting on trade policy, he stressed that uncertainty about trade remains a critical concern – repeating trade as being one of the top factors for the upcoming decision.
3) Investment notably slower: If recent trade headwinds impact the upcoming rate decision, investment impact long-term policy and also the potential for a long cycle of rate cuts. The Fed Chair said that investment had fallen notably and that may continue taking its toll for many months ahead.
4) Weak inflation more persistent: Back in May, Powell dismissed subdued inflation as "transitory." In June, he dropped this wording. And now, he seems fearful that weak inflation is becoming persistent. Is he hinting about a disappointing number in Thursday's Consumer Price Index report?
5) Not hot jobs market: While the statement praises the "strong" jobs market," Powell stated that he could not describe the labor market as hot. People are still being drawn in. To add insult to injury, he says that the current rise in wages is insufficient to push inflation higher.
EUR/USD levels to watch
EUR/SUD has risen sharply, breaking above the short-term downtrend channel. It is now facing critical resistance at 1.1270, which is the confluence of the 50 and 200 Simple Moving Averages on the four-hour chart. The level also served as support last week.
Further up, the 100 SMA awaits at the round number of 1.1300 and 1.1320 was a temporary high last week. 1.1350 and 1.1395 are next.
Looking down, 1.1235 – which capped the pair earlier this week – now turns into support. It is followed by 1.1195, the weekly low, and 1.1180 – mid-June's low. Next, we find 1.1145 and 1.1107.
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