Market Analysis: Event-Filled Day Moves Currencies

 | Sep 18, 2014 04:54AM ET

A day to remember Some days I come into work wondering “what am I going to write about today?” Not today. This is one of the biggest days I can remember ever knowing about in advance in my career. Let’s take the three main points in chronological order:

FOMC decision The FOMC kept its “considerable period” statement, but the key point was a sharp rise in the Fed funds forecasts: the median rose 25 bps to 1.375% for 2015, 2.875 (+37.5 bps) for 2016, and 3.75% for 2017. The likelihood of higher short-term rates pushed the dollar higher against every currency that we track, even though Fed Chair Yellen’s comments were not so hawkish – she said that there had been relatively little change in the outlook since June. Significantly, Yellen also signaled her approval of the ECB’s attempts to jump-start the Eurozone economy (see below) even though that is likely to weaken the euro. “We certainly hope they will be successful in seeing the pace of growth and inflation pick up and I think that will be good for the global economy and the US,” she said. The Committee also confirmed some technical changes in how it would implement monetary policy when the time to start raising rates does arrive.