Stocks And Commodities Soar As The US Dollar Falls

 | Mar 16, 2017 10:15

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Key Takeaway/h2

As expected the FOMC raised rates by 0.25% signalling 2 more hikes in 2017, and then 3 more in 2018.

In the wake of the decision US bonds rallied hard and the US dollar came under heavy selling pressure as traders noticed the dissent of one voting member – Neel Kashkari – and the fact the “dot plot” hadn't really changed from the December meeting. Equally the tone of Chair Yellen’s press conference was one of a firm commitment to measured moves which suggests no panic and no surprises from her or her FOMC colleagues.

It is the measured nature of the economic outlook, the dot plot, the FOMC statement, and chair Yellen’s press conference which appears to have caused the US dollar selling and bond buying. The Fed will be pleased I think. This is the just right goldilocks delivery of an interest rate increase which hasn’t spooked the markets and has actually seen the US dollar lose ground.

So the Aussie is back above 77 cents, euro is atop 1.07 on the Fed and Dutch election exit polls, USD/JPY is running toward 113, and sterling – yes sterling, is closing in on 1.23. And, in US dollar index terms prices are back below 101. 235,000 jobs in February, a Fed hike and a weaker dollar. President Trump and Steve Mnuchin, not to mention trade representative Peter Navarro, will all be smiling.

So too will the bond bulls with US 10s back at 2.50% - 13 points below the high for this week.

Commodities have bounced on the weaker dollar oil is now up 2.12%, gold has popped 1.6%, and copper is 1.45% higher.

And of course I haven't even mentioned stocks. The S&P 500 is up 20 points, the Dow Jones Industrial Average almost made it back to 21,000 and the Nasdaq 100 tried to make a new record high.

It suggests a strong open in Australia this morning before we get the jobs data at 11.30am.

h2 What You Need To Know (with a little more detail and a few charts)/h2
  • S&P 500 +19.8 (0.84%) 2885 (8 am Sydney)
  • Dow +113 (0.54%) 20950
  • Nasdaq +43 (0.74%) 5,900
  • SPI 200 +36 (0.6%) 5,818
  • AUD/USD 0.7705 +2%
  • Gold $1218 +1.7%
  • WTI Oil $48.96 2.6%
h2 International/h2
  • This is a central bank masterclass. The Fed has in the past few weeks materially changed market expectations, delivered on those expectations with a rate hike, but done so without disturbing the overall fabric of the market. It has been a pretty impressive manoeuver and Yellen and her colleagues should be lauded. Whether folks agree or disagree with the need to hike – I’m fully on board with raising rates – the key here is that the Fed has signalled to markets, and importantly US and global businesses, that it is in control and the economy is moving as expected. Things may change in the future if the economy accelerates or decelerates. But for now, job done.
  • Anyway, the key for the market reaction was the very measured language and projections from the Fed. Janet Yellen stressed in her press conference that the Fed’s decision today was reflection of where the economy is now with reference to the Fed’s mandate. She highlighted that the FOMC was not making a judgement on what impact the Trumponomics stimulus might have on the economy. She said the Fed will have plenty of time to assess that once they see what the administration actually does.
  • Looking at the statement the guys over at ForexLive have parsed the difference in language which helps highlight how balanced and gradual the Fed’s changes are.
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