Dollar In Range Ahead Of FOMC, Preparing For Breakout

 | Dec 19, 2018 02:07AM ET

Dollar is mildly softer in Asian session as traders turn cautious ahead of FOMC rate decision. But it should be noted that, except versus less, and to a lesser extent Swiss Franc, Dollar isn’t that weak. EUR/USD, GBP/USD and AUD/USD are bounded in consolidation in familiar range. USD/CAD has indeed extended recent rally, thanks to free fall in oil prices. The wild card in the new FOMC economic projections. Dollar could have a breakout from ranges whether there are changes in the projections or not.

Staying in the currency markets, Canadian Dollar is the weakest one for the week as WTI crude oil dived to as low as 46.07 on down trend resumption. Dollar is the second weakest for the week but is held above last week’s against all. Australian Dollar is the third weakest, also staying in prior week’s range. On other hand, Yen is notably strong as it’s now above last week’s high against Euro, Swiss Franc and Canadian.

In other markets, US treasury yields had another day of sharp decline overnight. 5-year yield closed down -0.037 at 2.656. 10-year yield dropped -0.032 to 2.825. 30-yer yield dropped -0.035 to 3.079. Yield curve is now inverted from 1-year (2.651) to 2-year (2.646) and 3-year (2.631). US stocks recovered mildly after Monday’s free fall. DOW rose 0.35%, S&P 500 rose 0.01%, NASDAQ rose 0.45%. In Asia, Nikkei is currently down -0.55%, Hong Kong HSI up 0.16%, China Shanghai SSE (LON:SSE) down -0.25%, Singapore Strait Times up 0.47%.

FOMC previews and recap of September projections

Despite all the political pressure, Fed is widely expected to raise federal funds rate by 25bps to 2.25-2.50% today. The meeting bears much more importance then just the rate hike, as investors would be eager to know Fed’s rate path in 2019, which has become pretty unsure recently. The statement, voting, and economic projections could all play a part in shaping market expectations.

In the November statement, Fed concluded by saying that “In determining the timing and size of future adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate, the Committee will assess realized and expected economic conditions relative to its maximum employment objective and its symmetric 2 percent inflation objective. This assessment will take into account a wide range of information, including measures of labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings on financial and international developments.”

That is, Fed based its decision on a wide range of meaningful data rather than just a few pieces of them. While Chair Jerome Powell might put more emphasis on data dependency, the statement itself is clear and comprehensive enough that doesn’t warrant a change.

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