FINANCE

Dollar Gains and Gold Falls on Hawkish Fed Comments

The dollar index (DXY00) on Friday rose by +0.27% and posted a fresh 2.75-month high.  Hawkish comments on Friday from Kansas City Fed President Jeff Schmid, Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, and Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack were supportive of the dollar when they cited reasons for opposing Fed rate cuts.  The dollar also rose after the Oct MNI Chicago PMI rose more than expected.  The dollar has carryover support from Wednesday on hawkish comments from Fed Chair Powell, who said a rate cut at the December FOMC meeting “is not a foregone conclusion.” Gains in the dollar were limited as Friday’s stock market rally curbed liquidity demand for the dollar.

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 US Oct MNI Chicago PMI rose +3.2 to 43.8, stronger than expectations of 42.3.

Kansas City Fed President Jeff Schmid said he voted against the Fed’s 25 bp interest rate cut on Wednesday because “the labor market is largely in balance, the economy shows continued momentum, and inflation remains too high.”


Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan said, “I did not see a need to cut rates this week, and I’d find it difficult to cut rates again in December unless there is clear evidence that inflation will fall faster than expected or that the labor market will cool more rapidly.”

Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack said she “would have preferred to have held interest rate steady at Wednesday’s FOMC meeting as we need to maintain some amount of restriction to help get inflation back down to target.”

The markets are discounting a 63% chance that the FOMC will cut the fed funds target range by 25 bp at the next FOMC meeting on December 9-10.  The markets are discounting an overall 82 bp rate cut by the end of 2026 to 3.06% from the current effective federal funds rate of 3.88%.

EUR/USD (^EURUSD) on Friday tumbled to a 2.75-month low and finished down by -0.33%.  The dollar’s strength on Friday weighed on the euro.  Friday’s Eurozone economic news was supportive for the euro after the Eurozone Oct core CPI and German Sep retail sales rose more than expected.

Central bank divergence is also supportive of the euro, with the ECB seen as finished with its rate-cut cycle while the Fed is expected to cut rates by at least another percentage point by the end of 2026.


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