The US Dollar (USD) is steady to sideways with small gains against all major G20 currencies. Traders are bracing for the last US Federal Reserve meeting of 2023. Although another pause in the monetary policy rate looks to be a given, the guiding speech from US Fed Chairman Jerome Powell will be the event that might move the needle. Another factor could be the Fed’s Dot Plot, forecasting the trajectory of interest rates based on the consensus views of Fed members.
On the economic front, all eyes will be on 19:00 GMT for the official rate announcement and initial guidance, followed by the press conference with Jerome Powell at 19:30 GMT. With the US Calendar bearing Producer Price metrics as well, a snooze fest is not in the cards. Instead expect a bumpy road in the runup towards the last Fed meeting of 2023.
The US Dollar is sending very mixed signals on its US Dollar Index (DXY) daily chart. The fact that the daily price action is showing lower highs with support holding steady along that 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at 103.55, points to a bearish pressure building. This makes it very clear that two scenarios are on the table for the outcome in the DXY this Wednesday.
The DXY could snap the declining tops and print new highs for not only the past few days, but for the past week. This means that 104.26 needs to break in order to deliver a bullish signal and see the Greenback advance against several major different currencies. In a case where the Fed and Powell deliver a very hawkish message to the markets, with cuts being repriced to the second or third quarter of this year, DXY could soar towards 105.
To the downside, the 200-day SMA could snap if the Fed drops the ball. Markets are expecting cuts, and should the Dot Plots confirm that idea, while Powell would say that cuts are not foreseen in an attempt to remain hawkish. Expect traders to disregard his comments, buy into US bonds, with US yields dropping again and seeing the Greenback in its turn nosediving towards 102.50, the low of November.
The “Dot Plot” is the popular name of the interest-rate projections by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) of the US Federal Reserve (Fed), which implements monetary policy. These are published in the Summary of Economic Projections, a report in which FOMC members also release their individual projections on economic growth, the unemployment rate and inflation for the current year and the next few ones. The document consists of a chart plotting interest-rate projections, with each FOMC member’s forecast represented by a dot. The Fed also adds a table summarizing the range of forecasts and the median for each indicator. This makes it easier for market participants to see how policymakers expect the US economy to perform in the near, medium and long term.
The US Federal Reserve publishes the “Dot Plot” once every other meeting, or in four of the eight yearly scheduled meetings. The Summary of Economic Projections report is published along with the monetary policy decision.
The “Dot Plot” gives a comprehensive insight into the expectations from Federal Reserve (Fed) policymakers. As projections reflect each official’s projection for interest rates at the end of each year, it is considered a key forward-looking indicator. By looking at the “Dot Plot” and comparing the data to current interest-rate levels, market participants can see where policymakers expect rates to head to and the overall direction of monetary policy. As projections are released quarterly, the “Dot Plot” is widely used as a guide to figure out the terminal rate and the possible timing of a policy pivot.
The most market-moving data in the “Dot Plot” is the projection of the federal funds rate. Any change compared with previous projections is likely to influence the US Dollar (USD) valuation. Generally, if the “Dot Plot” shows that policymakers expect higher interest rates in the near term, this tends to be bullish for USD. Likewise, if projections point to lower rates ahead, the USD is likely to weaken.
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