Fed Tightening View Supports USD

 | Aug 01, 2014 07:06AM ET

It looks like people are starting to come around to my view of what the FOMC minutes imply. Equities were down around the world while credit also suffered. Fed Funds expectations and bond yields initially rose, then fell back to trade lower as equities came off. In the US, the employment cost index rose 0.7% qoq in Q2, up sharply from 0.3% in Q1 and exceeding estimates of 0.5%. This is the highest rate of increase since the financial crisis of 2008 and made people think that perhaps there isn’t as much slack in the labor market as had been thought. Less slack in the labor market would mean earlier tightening by the Fed. It seems we are starting to repeat on a small scale what happened back in May 2013, when then-Fed Chairman Bernanke started to talk about ending the Fed’s quantitative easing program. Back then the dollar rose broadly against a wide variety of currencies. I would expect to see that performance repeated, although perhaps not quite on the same scale.