Dollar Rallies On Fed Comments, ASX Looks Set To Open Lower

 | Aug 29, 2016 06:29AM ET

Markets begin to wonder whether a September rate hike could actually happen

  • US dollar index rallies 0.8% after Fed’s Yellen and Fischer’s comments
  • Aussie dollar loses -0.84% to 0.7554 in the wake of the comments
  • Gold manages to close the session unchanged at US$1321.5
  • USD/JPY gains +1.33% to 101.87, biggest one-day gain since 12 July
  • WTI oil gains +0.17% to US$47.41 after rig count unchanged and attacks on Saudi Arabian oil facilities
  • ASX 200 futures are looking to open 13 points lower
  • Economic data: 11 am: Australia July HIA New Home Sales
  • Earnings: Austal (AX:ASB), Beach Energy (AX:BPT), Estia Health (AX:EHE), Reliance Worldwide (AX:RWC)

So Janet Yellen’s Jackson Hole speech has come and gone, and markets have gained minimal greater clarity on the future path of interest rates. The general takeaway is that a September rate hike is still unlikely, but the Fed would like to see the markets fully pricing in a December rate hike so it can come to pass with minimal fanfare.

The US dollar initially sold off on Yellen’s comments, and it was not until Stanley Fischer reiterated his hawkish comments that the USD really began to move higher. The US dollar index (DXY) gained 0.8% on the day, while benchmark US treasury yields moved higher by 3-7 basis points.

Gold, which normally moves inversely to US rates, closed flat on the session. But big selloffs were seen in the bond proxy-like S&P 500 utilities and telecoms sectors, which lost 2.1% and 1.1%, respectively.