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EUR/USD skates on thin ice near the eight-week low of 1.0950 in Wednesday’s European session.
EUR/USD skates on thin ice near the eight-week low of 1.0950 in Wednesday’s European session. The major currency pair stays under pressure as the US Dollar (USD) gathers strength to extend its previous week’s rally further, with the US Dollar Index (DXY) hovering near a seven-week high around 102.60.
The appeal of the US Dollar has strengthened as traders have priced out expectations for the Federal Reserve (Fed) to reduce interest rates again by 50 basis points (bps) in November. Traders were forced to unwind Fed large rate cut bets as the upbeat United States (US) Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report for September diminished downside risks to economic growth and consumer spending. Also, dismal market sentiment due to Middle East tensions has improved the Greenback’s appeal as a safe haven.
Financial market participants expect the Fed to cut interest rates by 25 bps in the remaining two policy meetings this year at the time of writing, according to the CME FedWatch tool.
In Wednesday’s session, investors will pay close attention to the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Minutes of the September meeting, which will be released at 18:00 GMT. The FOMC Minutes will convey the views of all officials on the interest rate and the economic outlook. In the September meeting, all members unanimously voted to start the policy-easing cycle with a 50-bps rate cut, except Fed Governor Michelle Bowman who favored a smaller reduction of 25 bps.
Going forward, the major trigger for the US Dollar will be the US Consumer Price Index (CPI) and the Producer Price Index (PPI) data for September, which will be published on Thursday and Friday, respectively.
The Euro (EUR) faces selling pressure as traders have priced in more rate cuts by the European Central Bank (ECB). The ECB is expected to cut its Deposit Facility Rate further by 50 bps to 3% by the year-end, suggesting that there will be a rate cut of 25 bps in each of the two policy meetings scheduled for next week and in December.
The ECB has already reduced its key borrowing rates by 50 bps this year as officials have remained confident that inflation will return to the bank’s target of 2% in 2025. Market expectations for the ECB to cut interest rates further have been prompted by the declining trend in price pressures and the economic vulnerability in the Eurozone.
ECB policymaker and Governor of the Greek Central Bank Yannis Stournaras has also backed two more rate cuts in each of the remaining meetings this year and emphasized the need to reduce them further in 2025 as inflation continues to decelerate, in his comments in an interview with Financial Times published on Wednesday. His comments also indicated that price pressures are declining faster than what the ECB forecasted in September.
EUR/USD struggles to gain ground near the immediate support of 1.0950. The major currency pair stays on the backfoot as it has delivered a breakdown of the Double Top chart pattern formation on a daily timeframe. The above-mentioned chart pattern was triggered after the shared currency pair broke below the September 11 low of 1.1000.
The 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) settles inside the bearish range of 20.00-40.00, suggesting more weakness ahead for EUR/USD.
Looking down, the pair is expected to find support near the 200-day EMA around 1.0900. On the upside, the 20-day EMA at 1.1090 and the September high around 1.1200 will be major resistance zones.
Malaysia is on track to achieve the status of a developed and high-income country, said Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi.
His remarks followed the World Bank’s revision of Malaysia’s economic growth forecast for this year, reflecting stronger-than-expected household consumption, improved investment and trade performance.
“After nearly two years since the establishment of the Unity Government, we have witnessed substantial progress, particularly in economic growth.
“This success is driven by effective government policies, strengthened investment and trade, and the political stability we have fostered,” he said.
He noted the encouraging performance of the ringgit, which appreciated by 2.5% against the US dollar in July 2024, significantly outperforming the Singapore dollar, Thai baht and Indonesian rupiah, which recorded average increases of only 1%.
Ahmad Zahid made these comments during the Rural and Regional Development Ministry’s monthly assembly here on Wednesday.
He highlighted that approved investments surged to RM160 billion in the first half of this year, marking an 18% increase compared to the same period in 2023.
Additionally, trade value rose by 18.6% in August, the highest growth in 22 months.
The inflation rate decreased to 1.9%, and the unemployment rate stabilised at 3.3%, with 190,000 job opportunities created in the second quarter of this year.
“There are still many achievements [that] we can be proud of, as Malaysians.
“Bursa Malaysia has seen gains, trading values have soared, Bank Negara Malaysia’s reserves have increased, and diesel smuggling has been curbed, among other successes,” he added.
The World Bank Group announced on Tuesday (Oct 8) that it had raised Malaysia’s economic growth forecast to 4.9% for 2024, up from the 4.3% projected last April.
Its chief economist for Malaysia, Dr Apurva Sanghi, attributed the upward revision to both domestic and external factors, noting that the global economy performed better than expected in the past six months.
The dollar is staying relatively bid as the market digests the factors that have driven it 2% higher this month. These have largely been the intensifying conflict in the Middle East and September's surprisingly strong US jobs report. The risk of an oil shock on the back of Israeli retaliation against Iran is clearly a stagflationary one for the global economy and has already seen the US 2-10 year Treasury curve bear flatten by 20bp since late September.
Bearish flattening of the curve is dollar-positive and normally sees the activity currencies hit the most. Yes, the dollar is the strongest G10 currency since late September followed by the defensive Swiss franc, but the third strongest is the Australian dollar. The fact that the Aussie is not at the bottom of the pack owes to developments in China. Here, the reflationary monetary policy enacted by Chinese policymakers two weeks ago – and still the lingering prospect that China will deliver fiscal stimulus after all at an announcement this Saturday – is proving to offset developments in the Middle East. Additionally, central banks elsewhere in the world seem committed to lowering interest rates. Overnight the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) cut rates by 50bp as Francesco Pesole expected.
The RBNZ also delivered a line in its press release which we think makes a lot of sense. The "current market pricing of risk is especially sensitive to downside economic surprises". With fears of slower growth building and the Middle East situation still very dangerous, equity markets look at risk. Daily FX correlations with the S&P 500 index this year show cross rates such as EUR/JPY and AUD/JPY as the most correlated. The Aussie could see some support from news out of China, but we would have thought this current EUR/JPY rally stalls in the 163/165 area and could break under 155 should the Middle East situation escalate. Equally, the dollar would stay bid buoyed by US energy independence and dollar liquidity.
Today, there is little data of note but tonight sees the release of the September FOMC minutes when the Fed cut 50bp. The market has already scaled back around 30bp from the 2024 Fed easing cycle over the last few weeks but equally we doubt investors are in the mood to re-price an aggressive Fed easing cycle just yet. Additionally, the risk of a 0.3% month-on-month September core CPI release could also prove a mild dollar positive. In short, there are not enough factors to call for a lower dollar in the near term and DXY can continue to press 102.60 with risks to 103.35.
EUR/USD is showing no inclination to trade back above 1.10. Normally we would argue that the prospect of fresh Chinese fiscal stimulus would be a euro positive – given the eurozone's relatively large share of exports to GDP. However, the Middle East situation and the threat of higher oil prices is a large euro negative and one which will hold the euro back this month.
We are disappointed that the EUR/USD rally stalled at 1.12 this Autumn and instead, 1.08 seems far more probable than a retest of 1.12. We continue to flat-line our multi-quarter EUR/USD forecasts at 1.10 until the outcome of November's US presidential election is known.
There is very little on the eurozone calendar today and while EUR/USD may press 1.10 on the back of this morning's news out of China – the Ministry of Finance will brief on fiscal policy this Saturday – we suspect sellers to emerge there.
The UK press is starting to reach a fever pitch with its speculation over what Chancellor Rachel Reeves will present in her first budget on 30 October. Critics argue that the budget should have been presented earlier, which would have prevented this policy void from being filled by other news. Investors remain on the lookout for any signs that the UK Gilt market is becoming nervous again about potential spending plans. True the 10-year Gilt-Bund spread has widened 25-30bp over the last month, although that may be as much down to miserable eurozone data than anything else. Equally, the five-year UK sovereign CDS has barely budged from a very tight 21bp – suggesting that there has not been a risk premium going into UK asset markets.
That said, it is becoming increasingly clear that the dollar will now stay a little stronger into US elections in November. This means we have not seen the lows for GBP/USD. A correction towards the 1.29 area seems probable in the coming weeks.
Yesterday brought the first significant strengthening of CEE FX this month after the recent sell-off. Although the EM space remains under pressure, it seems the CEE region just needed a few days of calm to start fading the move. Leading the strengthening was the forint supported by market whispers of a hawkish National Bank of Hungary, but gains were visible across the board.
The calendar in the CEE region again has little to offer today apart from the scheduled speech of the Hungarian PM to the European Parliament. However, we have already seen some headlines from the pre-session briefing yesterday. Overall, it seems that all the market needs at the moment is calm.
Although there are few global events on the schedule, geopolitical risks and potential escalation in the Middle East remain concerns. Therefore, we remain cautious but are gradually becoming more bullish on CEE currencies. As we mentioned previously, local fundamentals in our view remain strong given that the market has priced out much of the central bank easing across the region. Interest rate differentials post the sell-off are at record strong levels for CEE FX, which we think should be a key driver if the global story remains muted.
The USD/CHF pair trades on a stronger note to around 0.8575 during the early European session on Wednesday. The firmer US Dollar (USD) amid diminishing odds for more aggressive rate cuts by the Federal Reserve (Fed) underpins the pair. The release of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Minutes will take center stage later on Wednesday.
The stronger-than-expected jobs report last Friday lifts the Greenback and had markets tempering the expected scale of upcoming interest rate reductions. Boston Fed President Susan Collins stated that as inflation trends weaken, it is quite likely that the Fed will cut the interest rates further. Meanwhile, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic stated that the jobs market is not showing signs of weakness, adding that despite significant progress on inflation, overall price figures have not yet hit target levels.
Later this week, traders will shift their attention to the US Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation report on Thursday, which might offer some hints about the future Fed easing cycle. The headline CPI is expected to see an increase of 2.3% YoY in September, while the core CPI is estimated to see a rise of 3.2% YoY during the same period. Any signs of easing inflation might weigh on the USD and cap the upside for USD/CHF.
Hezbollah's senior leader said on Tuesday that it supports attempts to achieve a ceasefire in Lebanon, marking the first time the group has officially accepted a truce and not conditioned it on stopping the war in Gaza, per CNN. A possible ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel alleviated fears of a wider war in the Middle East. However, the negative development surrounding geopolitical risks in the region could boost the safe-haven flows, benefiting the Swiss Franc (CHF).
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