Dollar Little Changed on Weak US Housing News

The dollar index (DXY00) is little changed today.  Weaker-than-expected reports today on US May housing starts and building permits are undercutting the dollar.  Also, today’s -3% fall in WTI crude oil to a 3.25-month low is bearish for the dollar, as it lowers inflation expectations and could prompt the Fed to pursue easier monetary policy. …


Dollar Little Changed on Weak US Housing News

The dollar index (DXY00) is little changed today.  Weaker-than-expected reports today on US May housing starts and building permits are undercutting the dollar.  Also, today’s -3% fall in WTI crude oil to a 3.25-month low is bearish for the dollar, as it lowers inflation expectations and could prompt the Fed to pursue easier monetary policy.  The dollar has some negative carryover from Monday when the US and Iran announced a deal to end the war, which curbed safe-haven demand for the dollar.

The dollar’s focus will turn to the 2-day FOMC meeting that begins today and will be the first under the leadership of new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh.  While the Fed is expected to keep interest rates unchanged, the spotlight will be on how Mr. Warsh navigates the post-meeting press conference and the outlook for inflation.

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US May housing starts fell -15.4% m/m to a 6-year low of 1.177 million, weaker than expectations of 1.430 million.  May building permits, a proxy for future construction, fell -0.7% m/m to 1.413 million, weaker than expectations of 1.418 million.

The US May import price index ex-petroleum rose +0.8% m/m, stronger than expectations of +0.5% m/m.

The swaps markets are discounting the odds at 4% for a +25 bp rate cut hike at the conclusion of the Tue/Wed FOMC meeting.

EUR/USD (^EURUSD) is up by +0.06% but remains below Monday’s 1-week high.  The euro has support from today’s news showing the German Jun ZEW survey expectations of economic growth rose more than expected to a 4-month high.  Also, today’s -3% fall in crude prices is bullish for the Eurozone economy and the euro, as Europe imports most of its energy. Gains in the euro are limited after the 10-year German bund yield fell to an 8-week low of 2.92% today, which weakens the euro’s interest rate differentials. 

Eurozone Q1 labor costs were revised downward to +3.2% y/y from the previously reported +3.4% y/y.

The German Jun ZEW survey expectations of economic growth rose +20.7 to a 4-month high of 10.5, stronger than expectations of -5.5.

The markets are discounting a +17% chance for a +25 bp rate hike by the ECB at its next policy meeting on July 23.

USD/JPY (^USDJPY) today is up by +0.05%.  The yen is slightly lower today after the Nikkei Stock Index rallied to a new all-time high, which reduced safe-haven demand for the yen.  The yen was also pressured after the BOJ signaled it was stopping its tapering of bond purchases, a bearish factor for the yen.

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