DXY advances further and approaches 99.00
The US Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the greenback vs. a bundle of its main competitors, maintains the bid bias unchanged near the 99.00 region on Tuesday. The index extends the march north for the third session in a row on Tuesday and trades at a shouting distance from the 99.00 barriers as market participants keep adjusting to the recent hawkish message from Chief Powell, the move higher in US yields, and the persistent uncertainty surrounding the war in Ukraine. Indeed, US yields across the curve move further up after Chair Powell expressed his concerns over the elevated inflation and opened the door to a faster pace of the Fed’s tightening cycle. On this, Powell even considered the probability of a 50 bps rate hike in May.
Currently, and according to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, the probability of a 50 bps interest rate hike at the May 4 meeting is at almost 64%, up from around 50% just a week ago. In the US data space, the Richmond Fed Index will be the sole release along with speeches by NY Fed J.Williams (permanent voter, centrist), San Francisco Fed M.Daly (2024 voter, hawkish), and Cleveland Fed L.Mester (voter, hawkish). The index extends further the bounce off last week’s lows in the sub-98.00 area following the start of the tightening cycle by the Federal Reserve at its meeting on March 16.
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 potentially more aggressive tightening stance from the Fed and the solid performance of the US economy. Now, the index is up 0.26% at 98.73 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).
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 potentially more aggressive tightening stance from the Fed and the solid performance of the US economy. Now, the index is up 0.26% at 98.73 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).