Market Analysis For January 13, 2015

 | Jan 13, 2015 03:23AM ET

Dollar recovers but Fed expectations don’t The dollar generally recovered yesterday. It held steady against the pound and gained against all other G10 currencies even while the market continued to pare back its expectations for Fed tightening and US bond yields fell. The contradiction between the dollar’s performance and that of the interest rate market is a bit difficult to understand, but the key may be in oil: oil prices continued to collapse, leading the commodity-related currencies lower. The main theme in the market seems to be concerns about deflation. Copper hit a five-year low. In a situation of global deflation, all central banks will be hit with similar constraints, but the relative movement will remain the same: the US will be the first to tighten, even if the date is pared back. So some measure of dollar strength is compatible with diminishing Fed rate expectations as long as they go along with diminishing expectations for other central banks, too.