The US dollar took an early tumble on marginally disappointing Consumer Price Index and Housing Starts data, but later Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbles allowed the greenback to regain ground on risk aversion in broader financial markets. Previously billed as the event of the week, a largely uneventful CPI result gave little reason to shift outlook on the future of domestic interest rates.
The Euro initially scaled heights of $1.4211 through early New York trade, but a later Dow sell-off forced a notable reversal mid-way through the session. Relatively bullish economic developments out of the
Morning Consumer Price Index data fell largely in line with consensus forecasts, easing fears that strong price pressures would keep the US Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates further in 2007. A worsened outlook on US dollar interest rate differentials instantly forced the greenback lower, as markets now price in a 54 percent probability that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates to 4.50 percent through its October meeting. This represents a significant shift from one week ago, when Federal Funds Futures priced in just a 36 percent chance of such on occurrence. All else remaining equal, the sudden change in sentiment could send the US dollar substantively lower against major forex counterparts. Yet continued risk aversion and the threat of strong currency volatility following the weekend’s G7 summit may keep the dollar relatively bid through short term trade.
Renewed risk aversion forced the second day of substantial rallies in US Treasury Bonds, and the yield on the 2-Year Note tumbled 11 basis points to 3.99 percent. The aforementioned shift in interest rate expectations undoubtedly played a role in the sudden bond volatility, but it is clear that market skittishness drove the majority of Treasury price advances. The longer-dated 10-year yield tumbled a similar 10bp to 4.55 percent.
Written by David Rodríguez, Currency Analyst for DailyFX.com