Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Dollar Gives Up Early Gains as Stocks Rebound

The dollar index (DXY00) on Wednesday fell from a 5.25-month high and finished down by -0.05%.  The dollar gave up its advance on Wednesday and posted modest losses after stocks recovered following Tuesday’s rout, which dampened liquidity demand for the dollar. Also, the dollar is still under pressure from the ongoing US government shutdown.  The longer the shutdown is maintained, the more likely the US economy will suffer and the more likely the Fed will have to cut interest rates.

The dollar initially moved higher on Wednesday after the US Oct ADP employment change rose more than expected, a hawkish factor for Fed policy.  The dollar raced tits high on Wednesday when the Oct ISM services index rose more than expected to an 8-month high.

The dollar also garnered some support today from a Washington Post report that said a handful of moderate Senate Democrats are considering voting to end the government shutdown.  In addition, the dollar has carry-over support from Fed Chair Powell’s warning last week that another rate cut in December is not a foregone conclusion.

The US Oct ADP employment change rose by +42,000, stronger than expectations of +30,000.

The US Oct ISM services index rose +2.4 to 52.4, stronger than expectations of 50.8 and the fastest pace of expansion in 8 months. However, price pressures in the service sector accelerated after the Oct ISM services prices paid sub-index unexpectedly rose +0.6 to a 3-year high of 70.0, versus expectations of a decline to 68.0.

The markets are discounting a 62% chance that the FOMC will cut the fed funds target range by 25 bp at the next FOMC meeting on December 9-10.

EUR/USD (^EURUSD) recovered from a 3-month low on Wednesday and finished up by +0.08%.  Short covering lifted the euro on Wednesday after the dollar gave up early gains and turned lower.  Also, Wednesday’s Eurozone economic news that showed the Eurozone Oct S&P composite PMI was revised upward and German factory orders rose by the most in 5 months, were bullish for the euro.  The euro initially moved lower on Wednesday due to dollar strength and easing producer price pressures in the Eurozone after the Eurozone Sep PPI fell more than expected, a dovish factor for ECB policy.

Central bank divergence is supportive of the euro, with the ECB seen as largely finished with its rate-cut cycle, while the Fed is expected to cut rates several more times by the end of 2026.

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