Though many have preached the buck’s dead
The greenback keeps moving ahead
And right now, it seems
Their ‘pocalypse dreams
Are still all confined to their head(s)
But narrative writers ignore
Whatever they said from before
Right now, it’s the buck
That’s causing bad luck
As rate hike bets all start to soar
In a fairly rare set of circumstances, the dollar has drawn the spotlight in markets for the past few sessions. While it always matters to some extent, it is rarely seen as the cause of many other market movements, just a coincident one. But right now, I read more about how the strong dollar is driving equity weakness and commodity weakness as more and more bets get placed on the Fed hiking rates aggressively to address inflation by the end of the year.
Using the DXY as proxy, the first chart is the one everybody wants you to focus on, showing the last year and how we have had a clear break above the trading range top of 100.50 and now people are creating targets for just how high it can go.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
And it certainly can go higher, as a quick step back to get some more perspective shows where the dollar has been during the past 5 years. It seems to me I could create a narrative that the dollar has been massively undervalued over the past 18 months, and this move is simply returning it closer to its longer-term fair value. In fact, just eyeballing, it seems quite reasonable to think the 5yr average of the DXY is somewhere around 103-104 (subsequently confirmed with Grok), still a few percent higher than current levels. Reversion to the mean anyone?

Source: tradingeconomics.com
All of this, though, begs the question, are rate hikes really on the near-term horizon? I remain firmly in the camp that is not the case. Fortunately, someone on my side is super smart, Bob Elliott, former hedge fund manager at Bridgewater.
On the rate hike front, the below CME probability table has barely changed from yesterday as the narrative is strong that rate hikes are coming.

I cannot really understand why this is suddenly the belief set given the fact that the key driver of recent higher inflation data has been the price of oil, and that price continues to fall, down a further -2.0% this morning. I understand that gasoline prices have not fallen quite as dramatically, but nothing about the chemistry has changed and I remain highly confident that those prices will be falling as well, catching down to oil.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
So, I remain confused as to why everybody seems to believe the Fed, which despite a new Chair remains the same institution that observed inflation run higher for years during Covid and calling it transitory, has become the reincarnation of the Bundesbank. In fact, the only rationale I see is that other than Waller, Warsh and Bowman, who were all appointed by Trump, everybody else in that room has TDS and is terrified that things will work out such that by the time the election rolls around, the economy is ticking over nicely with inflation a historical issue. And frankly, I think most of them do share that affliction.
But other than Powell, and Cook to some extent, none of them have really felt the force of the critiques that come with upsetting President Trump, and frankly he didn’t care about Cook per se, she was just a convenient target to get ousted so he could put his man in there. And in fairness, Cook is a massive dove, and should agree with Trump on this policy, but I’m sure she doesn’t because…Trump. I am confident none of them signed up for being in that spotlight.
Apparently, BOA is calling for 3 rate hikes this year in the final four meetings. I think that’s nuts, but futures are pricing a 2/3 chance of a hike at the end of July, which I also think is nuts.
The recent hiccup in stocks, and the steadier downturn in commodities has been blamed on dollar strength which is being driven by expectations of rate hikes coming soon. While I like the dollar in the long-term, that is because I believe investment flows into the US will drive it, not financial arbitrage flows. As things evolve, I expect the market to understand the Fed will not be hiking rates and narratives will need to find a new bogeyman.
Ok, let’s tour markets quickly. Yesterday’s equity market selloff in the US, following the tech selloff in Asia closed well off the lows and futures this morning are pointing slightly higher. Asia was mixed overnight with Korea (+3.3%) rebounding sharply although there was weakness in Japan (-0.9%), Taiwan (-2.25%), Indonesia (-3.6%) and the Philippines (-2.2%). But on the flip side, China (+0.5%), HK (+0.3%) and India (+1.0%) all followed Korea while other regional exchanges had much more limited movement. It appears that people are trying to figure out what to do for now.
In Europe, Germany (-1.0%) is the laggard after Germany cancelled its plans for a new warship and Rheinmetall, the company set to win biggest there, got crushed. But elsewhere +/-0.3% or less is the norm with little new information as traders await the next shoe to drop.
In the bond market, interest is low as 10-year Treasury yields continue to track around the 4.5% level and movement has been 1bp or so lower across all of Europe. Nothing to see here for now. Just wait until views start to change on rate hikes though!
Metals markets continue to get hammered with gold (-1.7%), silver (-2.9%) and copper (-1.6%) all still falling as the opening narrative about higher rates and a stronger dollar play out. The thing is, I think the fundamentals remain positive for metals markets as there continues to be central bank demand for gold as well as industrial interest in silver and copper and long-term shortages of supply. But right now, none of that matters.
Finally, looking beyond the DXY, it is no surprise the euro (-0.35%) and pound (-0.35%) are lower given the DXY’s continued rise, but the yen (-0.1% and at a new low (dollar high) for the move) continues to slide and there is weakness pretty much across the board in both the G10 and EMG blocs. KRW (-1.0%) is today’s laggard while INR (+0.2%) is the lone currency holding its own. This continues to be a dollar focused story so when the rates story changes, so will the dollar.
On the data front, we see New Home Sales (exp 640K) and then EIA Oil inventories with yet another large draw expected. And that’s it for today. As long as this rate hike narrative remains primary, look for weaker risk appetite and a strong dollar. But I think it is a short-term phenomenon.
Good luck
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