The greenback, in terms of the US Dollar Index (DXY), keeps the bid tone unchanged and trades close to the key barrier at the 99.00 barrier on Thursday.
The index is up for the second session in a row so far on Thursday. The upside bias in the dollar remains underpinned by the resumption of the uptrend in US yields across the curve and firmer prospects for a faster/tighter normalization by the Federal Reserve, all seasoned by persistent geopolitical concerns.
On the latter, the probability of a 50 bps interest rate hike at the May meeting is now at around 68%, more than doubling the probability of just a week ago according to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool.
In the meantime, yields continue its flattening process after the 2y note retest the 2.15% area and the 10y bond hover around the 2.35% region.
In the US data space, Markit will publish the preliminary Manufacturing and Services PMIs for the current month. In addition, usual Initial Claims are due seconded by Durable Goods Orders and speeches by FOMC’s R.Waller (permanent voter, hawkish), Chicago Fed C.Evans (2023 voter, centrist) and Atlanta Fed R.Bostic (2024 voter, centrist).
The weekly recovery in the dollar met resistance near 99.00 so far. Concerns surrounding the geopolitical landscape prop up further the demand for the buck in combination with the offered stance in the risk-associated complex. Looking at the broader picture, bouts of risk aversion – exclusively emanating from Ukraine - should underpin inflows into the safe havens and lend legs to the dollar at a time when its constructive outlook remains well supported by the current elevated inflation narrative, a potential more aggressive tightening stance from the Fed and the solid performance of the US economy.
Key events in the US this week: Initial Claims, Durable Goods Orders, Flash PMIs (Thursday) – Final Consumer Sentiment, Pending Home Sales (Friday).
Eminent issues on the back boiler: Escalating geopolitical effervescence vs. Russia and China. Fed’s rate path this year. US-China trade conflict. Futures of Biden’s Build Back Better plan.
Now, the index is up 0.11% at 98.71 and a break above 98.96 (weekly high March 22) would open the door to 99.29 (high March 14) and finally 99.41 (2022 high March 7). On the flip side, the next down barrier emerges at 97.72 (weekly low March 17) followed by 97.71 (weekly low March10) and then 97.44 (monthly high January 28).
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