Dollar Declines on a Benign US CPI Report

The dollar index (DXY00) fell by -0.32% on Tuesday.  The dollar retreated on Tuesday after US June consumer prices rose less than expected, a dovish factor for Fed policy.  Also, the benign CPI report has reduced the chances of a Fed rate hike at the FOMC meeting later this month to 17% from 43% on…


Dollar Declines on a Benign US CPI Report

The dollar index (DXY00) fell by -0.32% on Tuesday.  The dollar retreated on Tuesday after US June consumer prices rose less than expected, a dovish factor for Fed policy.  Also, the benign CPI report has reduced the chances of a Fed rate hike at the FOMC meeting later this month to 17% from 43% on Monday, further weighing on the dollar.   

The dollar recovered from its worst level after Fed Chair Warsh said the US economy is resilient and growing at a solid pace.  Also, escalating hostilities in the Middle East are boosting safe-haven demand for the dollar after US forces launched another round of strikes against Iran today and the UAE said Iran attacked two oil tankers in Omani waters.  In addition, Tuesday’s +1% jump in crude oil prices to a 1-month high raises inflation expectations and could prompt the Fed to tighten monetary policy, a supportive factor for the dollar. 

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US Jun CPI eased to +3.5% y/y from +4.2% y/y in May, a slower pace of increase than expectations of +3.8% y/y.  Also, Jun core CPI eased to +2.6% y/y from +2.9% y/y in May, better than expectations of +2.8% y/y.

Fed Chair Warsh said the US economy is resilient, growing at a solid pace, and that the labor market is broadly stable and nominal wage growth is solid.  He added that the Fed has “no tolerance” for persistently high inflation.

Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said Tuesday’s CPI report was “surprisingly benign,” though policymakers will need more than one month of data to assess if inflation is trending back to the Fed’s 2% goal.

The swaps markets are discounting the odds at 17% for a +25 bp rate hike at the next FOMC meeting on July 28-29.

EUR/USD (^EURUSD) rallied to a 1-week high on Tuesday and finished up by +0.38%.  The euro rose on Tuesday after the weaker-than-expected US Jun CPI report knocked the dollar lower.  The euro also received support on Tuesday from higher European bond yields, which have strengthened the euro’s interest rate differentials, after the 10-year German Bund yield rose to a 1.75-month high of 3.144%. 

The markets are discounting a +14% chance for a +25 bp rate hike by the ECB at its next policy meeting on July 23.

USD/JPY (^USDJPY) fell by -0.15% on Tuesday.  The yen moved higher on Tuesday amid comments from Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama, who said there are discussions within the ruling party to add government bonds to a tax-free investment program for individuals, which would boost demand for the yen.  The yen added to its gains after T-note yields fell on the dovish US Jun CPI report.   

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