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Looking at recent moves in major currency pairs, it’s clear that market participants have come to terms with Donald Trump’s victory in the U.S.
Looking at recent moves in major currency pairs, it’s clear that market participants have come to terms with Donald Trump’s victory in the U.S. presidential election and are starting to prepare for changes to the global economic landscape. Among the new president’s campaign promises was the introduction of additional tariffs on imports to the U.S. For instance, Trump has proposed around a 25% tariff on Mexican imports and a range of 10% to 20% for goods from European nations. Unsurprisingly, the prospect of potential trade wars is impacting the pricing of pairs such as EUR/USD and GBP/USD.
The Euro has been in decline for the second consecutive week. Yesterday, it hit a new yearly low near 1.0600 but found support at 1.0590, bouncing slightly. If the 1.0600-1.0580 range turns into resistance, the pair may test the lows seen in 2023, around 1.0520-1.0460. A sustained upward move is likely only if the pair firmly clears 1.0730-1.0680.
The following news could significantly influence EUR/USD pricing:
Today at 11:00 (GMT +3), a European Central Bank meeting on non-monetary policy
Today at 13:30 (GMT +3), Germany’s 10-year treasury bond auction
Today at 16:30 (GMT +3), release of the U.S. core consumer price index (CPI)
Yesterday, GBP/USD sellers broke through a critical support range at 1.2830-1.2800, with the price declining to 1.2720 before correcting to 1.2760. The price’s behavior around the 1.2800-1.2760 range will be key for identifying the next trend. A rejection at this level may lead to further declines towards 1.2720-1.2700, while a break above 1.2800 could signal the start of an upward correction.
Key events that could affect GBP/USD today:
12:45 (GMT +3) – Speech by Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee member Catherine Mann
13:00 (GMT +3) – Release of data on the sale of 4-year treasury securities in the UK
21:30 (GMT +3) – Speech by Federal Reserve official Jeffrey Schmid
The second round of post-election Trump trades has now taken the DXY dollar index to the 2022 highs as markets sink their teeth into the dual narrative of a wider rate and growth gap between the US and other developed countries. The latest news on the government appointment side is that Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy will lead a “department of government efficiency”, which aims to slash bureaucracy and spending. It is too early to tell what this will effectively mean for public finances, but this confirms that Musk will play a key advisory role in the Trump administration, which likely fuels expectations for de-regulation and looser taxation.
The strong dollar is currently pricing in a good deal of Trump’s policy mix, and data releases/dovish Fed comments might offer good opportunities to take profit in bullish dollar positions. However, our house view for today’s US inflation report is that core CPI kept rising at a consensus 0.3% MoM in October, and headline CPI at 0.2%. This is above the 0.17%MoM rate that needs to be averaged over time to hit the 2% inflation target, and should keep markets on the dovish side of the pricing for the Fed.
Still, pricing is already quite cautious on further Fed easing, with only 15bp priced in for December and 23bp by January. This means there is probably an asymmetric downside risk for the dollar today in case of a slightly lower-than-expected core CPI print. There are also a few Fed speakers to monitor today: Kashkari, Williams, Musalem and Schmid.
If we are right with our CPI call, then the dollar rally could find a bit more steam and DXY consolidate above 106. Nevertheless, the recent bullish move is starting to look a bit stretched, and the risk of a positioning-led short-term USD correction similar to the 7 November one is quite high.
EUR/USD has remained under intense pressure from a broad USD rally and may well make a move below 1.06 today if the US core CPI comes in at 0.3% MoM. Despite the size of the recent EUR/USD drop, we must note that 1.060 is the short-term fair value level implied by short-term rate differentials. The USD:EUR two-year swap rate gap has continued to widen rapidly, and is currently around 185bp.
In other words, there is not much additional risk premium being added to EUR/USD compared to what rates are suggesting, as markets are doubling down on expectations that the ECB will slash rates more than the Fed ahead of the tariff impact on growth.
We are, by all means, in the dovish camp with our ECB call, and actually think markets are still underpricing (30bp) the chances of a 50bp cut in December.
The eurozone calendar is quite quiet today and US news will drive EUR/USD. A stretched positioning argues for some short-term upward correction in the pair, but as per the USD section above, we don’t expect this to happen today given a still-hot US CPI. Regardless of short-term adjustments, the direction of travel is bearish for EUR/USD, in our view, and we target 1.04 for year-end.
The main event in sterling markets today is a speech by Bank of England’s Catherine Mann, the most hawkish member of the MPC. Markets will be attentive to any comments about the implications of the recent budget for monetary policy and any colour on the latest jobs/wage figures. Given her arch-hawkish stance, we suspect she could stress – if anything – the inflationary aspect of the government’s spending boost and perhaps focus more on the sticky wage figure rather than the rise in the unemployment rate in September.
Ultimately, the GBP curve does not need many more hawkish hints to move at this stage. Markets are pricing little to no chance of a cut in December, and only 50bp in total by September 2025. In our view, the risks remain skewed towards a dovish repricing and consequent negative impact on sterling, although a repricing lower in rates may take some time to materialise as markets will tread carefully when assessing the inflationary implications of the budget. The soft momentum for the EUR means EUR/GBP could remain close to the 0.8300 gravity line.
The market has almost ignored the inflation numbers over the last two days within the CEE region and the global story seems to be in the spotlight still.
Today will not be much different. The calendar offers current account numbers for September in Poland, the Czech Republic and Romania. Those produced a positive surprise last month in the Czech Republic and a negative one in Poland, which the market could watch this time around to see if it was a one-off or a trend reversal.
However, the main story remains the declining EUR/USD which should keep pressure on the CEE currencies. We remain bearish here. If anything we see PLN outperforming the region but perhaps later rather than sooner, however yesterday EUR/PLN bounced off 4.360 which seems like a key level. While HUF seems like a separate story now PLN/CZK may get the market's attention given the bounce back from 5.800 which seems like a limit to PLN's weakness here and could get some support.
US rates are moving higher, and this might be the path of least resistance in the coming days, given Trump's victory and the potentially hotter CPI and PPI figures on Wednesday and Thursday.
Markets are continuing to pare back their Fed rate easing expectations. A cut in December is just about a 50/50 probability event in the eyes of the market. The SOFR futures strip bottoms out just above 3.80% and only around late-2026 to mid-2027. The broader Treasury curve, ie, 2s10s has resteepened somewhat, also driven by resuming issuance activities of the wider market.
Overall we are still in a bit of limbo in terms of the timing and impact of Trump's policies. This state where we move from pricing promises to looking at actual policies might last for some months, and in the meantime we think there is still a chance that data will sour and trigger a (temporary) leg lower in rates. But we need to see that cue from the data first.
Looking at the eurozone, we see an ongoing divergence compared to the US. Following the disappointing ZEW reading, front-end rates pushed lower, including pricing for a potentially even larger 50bp cut by the European Central Bank in December.
The 2y ESTR OIS rate tested the downside and is now slightly below last week’s level, while the US 2y SOFR rates increased by 9bp after the Monday holiday. The EUR back end couldn’t fully escape the global trend of rising rates on Tuesday when the US markets reopened. The 10y ESTR OIS rate is now up by 1bp following Tuesday’s late rise, but the spread to SOFR has widened by 9bp to over 170bp – the widest since late 2019.
Where things start to get a little clearer is the timing of elections in Germany after the recent government turmoil – a confidence vote is now slated for 16 December with new elections expected to take place on 23 February. The 10Y Bund has already stabilised over the past few days at around 1-2bp above the 6m Euribor-based swap rate. While the above swaps levels are a first for Bunds, we have made the point before that when comparing to OIS – a largely risk-free rate expectations measure – the currently observed levels “merely” represent a return to the pre-QE situation of 2014.
The US CPI numbers will draw the most attention, with the core CPI expected to come in at a relatively hot 0.3% month-on-month. US CPI numbers triggered sharp global rate reactions over the summer, but more recently the focus has shifted to growth concerns. Later in the day, we have several Fed speakers, including Musalem from the St Louis Fed who will speak about the economy and monetary policy.
In terms of issuance, Italy will auction 3Y, 6Y, 8Y and 15Y BTPs for a total of €8.25bn. Germany has scheduled a 10Y Bund for €4bn, and Portugal a 10Y and 20Y OTs totalling €1.25bn. The UK will be auctioning £4bn of new 3Y Gilts.
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