|

USD momentum to continue supported by the Fed re-pricing

More hawkish Fed and lower energy prices

A resilient US labour market and signs of persistent underlying inflation have kept US monetary policy repricing at centre stage. At Kevin Warsh's first meeting as Fed Chair, rates were left unchanged, though communication revealed a shift toward a hiking bias, which in turn led to a repricing of USD rates. As expected, the ECB delivered a 0.25 percentage point hike, citing increased inflationary concerns, although economic data have surprised to the downside in the past months. The preliminary US-Iran agreement has pulled oil prices down, though the otherwise muted market reaction extends the pattern of fading FX sensitivity to the Iran war. Against this backdrop, risk appetite has been mixed, caught between the headwinds of a hawkish Fed repricing and a resilient equity market, where a strong rebound in tech stocks has brought global indices back close to new highs.

Over the past month, the dollar has continued to strengthen against the backdrop of a Fed tightening bias, pushing EUR/USD below the 1.14 mark. Overall FX market developments have remained relatively muted. The retreat in energy prices has turned into a headwind for energy-exporting economies, reversing the last months' tailwind, leaving NOK, CAD and AUD as the relative underperformers in G10. Noteworthy, the SEK has also had a bad month, despite the drop in energy prices, which reflects the general overperformance of Swedish fixed income. USD/JPY has been gravitating around the 160 level, with a strong USD supporting the cross despite the Bank of Japan's 0.25 percentage point hike to 1.00%.

Positive on the dollar and negative on Scandies

Given the recent move lower in EUR/USD, we extend last month's forecast on the 1-6M horizon, expecting the cross at 1.13 in 6 months, while we keep our 12M expectations at 1.12. For EUR/SEK, we leave our forecast profile unchanged as the risk of heightened inflation continue to weigh, expecting the cross to trade around the 11.00 on the 6M and 11.20 on the 12M-horizon. For EUR/NOK we have outcome-adjusted our profile slightly upwards on the back of the recent NOK weakening, driven by a tightening of short-end rates spreads to EUR, and now target the cross at 11.80 in 12M.

Near-term risks are closely tied to the war in Iran, while medium- to long-term risks continue to be tied to the US growth outlook and the US monetary policy outlook. A much firmer focus by the Warsh-led Fed on bringing down nominal pressures in the US economy could result in a considerably stronger USD and weaker Scandies than we pencil in. Additionally, should the US economy prove less resilient than we forecast, fears of a US recession could weigh heavily on the USD, with CHF, JPY and EUR likely proving the biggest beneficiaries in such a scenario. For EUR, a more prolonged ECB hiking cycle, potentially driven by fiscal easing or a more resilient euro area economy, could also cap USD strength. Finally, we will closely monitor uncertainty related to AI and broader signs of a turning global cycle.

Download the Full Report!

Author

Danske Research Team

Danske Research Team

Danske Bank A/S

Research is part of Danske Bank Markets and operate as Danske Bank's research department. The department monitors financial markets and economic trends of relevance to Danske Bank Markets and its clients.

More from Danske Research Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD appears well offered near 1.3160

GBP/USD builds on Tuesday’s losses, although it now manages to pick up some pace and bounce off earlier multi-month troughs near 1.3140. The Greenback’s solid performance and continued political turmoil in the UK are keeping Cable under persistent pressure, with little sign of a meaningful recovery.

EUR/USD trims losses, hovers around 1.1350

EUR/USD now regains some composure and rebounds to the 1.1350 zone on Wednesday, partially reversing the prior pullback to fresh yearly lows near 1.1320. Meanwhile, spot remains on the back foot as the US Dollar continues to draw support from hawkish Fed expectations and uncertainty over the outcome of US-Iran peace negotiations.

Gold pressured near fresh 2026 lows

Gold accelerates its decline and gyrates around the key $4,000 mark per troy ounce on Wednesday, its lowest level since November 2025. In the meantime, tighter-for-longer Fed expectations and a broadly firmer US Dollar continue to weigh on the yellow metal, while uncertainty surrounding a potential US-Iran peace agreement has done little to revive demand for the safe haven space.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP trade under pressure as September Fed rate-hike odds increase

Bitcoin is trading between $62,000 and $63,000 at the time of writing on Wednesday, weighed down by headwinds stemming from macroeconomic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.

5.90% to 5.45%: Why the Pound ignored the bond market’s relief rally

Keir Starmer resigned on Monday, and the Pound barely moved. That near-silence is the tell. Sterling's real driver these past four months has not been the prime minister, nor the left-leaning frontrunner lining up to replace him, but the long end of the gilt curve, which answers to a force no British politician controls.

Regime change: Inside Kevin Warsh's first move to make the Fed unreadable on purpose

The rate did not move. That was the least interesting thing about Kevin Warsh's first meeting in charge of the Fed. The FOMC held its benchmark at 3.50%-3.75% for the fourth straight meeting, exactly as priced, and then the new chair used his first press conference to dismantle the machinery the market has leaned on for a decade.