(Giles Coghlan LLB, Lth, MA – HYCM)
Jerome Powell is going to have to correct market expectations from the last Fed meeting in July. In July’s meeting, the Fed recognised that some ‘recent indicators of spending and production have softened’. This was enough for some to say, ‘The Fed has taken a dovish shift’. There was then a run in equities, a drop in the USD, and a drop in yields as markets looked for a ‘dovish pivot’. Jerome Powell is likely to correct this perception with a more hawkish stance next week.
The mixed data since the last Fed meeting
There has been a very strong jobs print way above market expectations, a big miss in the NY Empire Manufacturing print, a beat in Manufacturing and services ISM, core inflation dropped more than expected at 5.9% y/y vs 6.1% forecast, consumer expectation in the Univ of Michigan survey beat expectations, but house sales are falling more sharply than minimum expectations.
All the mixed recent US data has meant the picture is really unclear for the US economy. So, there has not been a conviction in any run higher in risk assets since the picture is so mixed. This has been a very tricky market to trade; check this recent article outlining what approach to take in this kind of market.
Lessons from history
Jerome Powell will want to avoid the mistake of going ‘soft’ on inflation. This softly, softly approach led to Volcker in the 1980s having to come in and take interest rates up to 20% and unemployment to 10%. This is common knowledge and in living memory, so Jerome Powell is likely to tell markets we are hiking until the job is done. It is reasonable to expect a hawkish stance from Powell this week.
Therefore, be very cautious of being long on equities into the meeting as Powell could easily send the recent rally in stocks sharply lower by reminding markets that he is going to be hiking rates until inflation falls back down.


EUR/USD outlook: Bears are on track for retest of 2022 low
(Slobodan Drvenica – Windsor Brokers)
The Euro resumes strong fall of past two days and pressuring parity level in early Monday trading, following 2.1% drop last week.
Growing negative sentiment on continuous weak economic data from the EU that prompts traders into safety of US dollar, strongly weigh on the single currency.
Bears are on track for another probe through parity level and retest of 2022 low at 0.9952 (July 14), where previous attempt was strongly rejected.
Fully bearish weekly studies support the notion, though oversold daily techs suggest that bears may face headwinds on approach to key support and pause the downtrend for consolidation.
Upticks should stay under 1.01 zone and expected to provide better selling opportunities for push through 0.9952 pivot that would unmask Sep 2002 low at 0.9607.
Res: 1.0050; 1.0100; 1.0160; 1.0184.
Sup: 1.0000; 0.9952; 0.9900; 0.9853.


Read AUDUSD Outlook: Attempted recovery might still be seen as a selling opportunity