Welcome to Blink December is normally a weak month for the dollar. January and February are typically much better months. Thus for dollar bulls like ourselves, December is proving a month of damage limitation
Dollar price action is still soft
Any whiff of softer price data – e.g. yesterday’s downward revision to US 3Q unit labour cost data – sees the dollar easily slip. Dollar gains remain hard to come by.
Beyond today’s US initial claims (remaining remarkably low in the 220-240,000 region) will be November PPI data tomorrow (core expected to fall to 5.9% year-on-year from 6.7%) and then an incredibly busy week into Tuesday’s CPI release and Wednesday’s FOMC meeting. Preventing an even large dollar correction this month is the fact that Fed expectations have not yet crumbled.
The terminal rate is still priced above 4.90% for next spring and this is just about keeping US two-year Treasury yields above the 4.25% area. Short-end yields holding up here and the ongoing inversion of the US curve is key to our call that the dollar can hold gains/bounce back into 1Q23. Clearly, next week’s FOMC meeting will have a big say here – we will publish our FOMC preview shortly.
DXY looks like it will continue to trade on a soft footing near 105.00, but should meet demand below there.
ECB focus moves onto QT
EUR/USD remains reasonably supported near 1.05 – helped largely by the dollar’s soft performance across the board. We may be reading too much into it, but the pricing through the OIS market for next week’s European Central Bank rate meeting yesterday edged up to a 67bp hike from 54bp a day earlier. The move may be a function of some more hawkish remarks from ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane and seems to be putting the risk of a 75bp hike back on the agenda. Our house call is for 50bp.
“Our base case view assumes that this EUR/USD corrective rally stalls in the 1.05/1.06 area this month. The bigger risk of a rally probably comes more from a less hawkish Fed than a more hawkish ECB. Equally, we do see European gas prices edging higher again as a cold snap hits northern Europe. TTF natural gas prices are now back up to EUR150/MWH from 100 earlier this month,” ING analysts said.
“This will again pressure the trade balance and higher gas prices are one of the key reasons we are not more bullish on EUR/USD next year. Expect another narrow EUR/USD range today centered around 1.05. The data calendar is quite light and ECB speakers are President Christine Lagarde at 1300CET, Pablo De Cos at 1315CET and Francois Villeroy at 17CET – all seen on the dovish end of the spectrum.”
What’s moving market today
Elsewhere, we have the Swiss National Bank’s Andrea Maechler speaking at 1530CET. In addition to Fed, ECB and Bank of England rate meetings next week we also have the quarterly SNB policy decision. It looks like market pricing is split between a 25bp and 50bp hike (taking rates to 0.75-1.00%). Let’s see what she has to say today. EUR/CHF has been a bit stronger than we had expected, but assuming the SNB stays hawkish, we continue to see downside risks here.

Welcome to Blink December is normally a weak month for the dollar. January and February are typically much better months. Thus for dollar bulls like ourselves, December is proving a month of damage limitation
Dollar price action is still soft
Any whiff of softer price data – e.g. yesterday’s downward revision to US 3Q unit labour cost data – sees the dollar easily slip. Dollar gains remain hard to come by.
Beyond today’s US initial claims (remaining remarkably low in the 220-240,000 region) will be November PPI data tomorrow (core expected to fall to 5.9% year-on-year from 6.7%) and then an incredibly busy week into Tuesday’s CPI release and Wednesday’s FOMC meeting. Preventing an even large dollar correction this month is the fact that Fed expectations have not yet crumbled.
The terminal rate is still priced above 4.90% for next spring and this is just about keeping US two-year Treasury yields above the 4.25% area. Short-end yields holding up here and the ongoing inversion of the US curve is key to our call that the dollar can hold gains/bounce back into 1Q23. Clearly, next week’s FOMC meeting will have a big say here – we will publish our FOMC preview shortly.
DXY looks like it will continue to trade on a soft footing near 105.00, but should meet demand below there.
ECB focus moves onto QT
EUR/USD remains reasonably supported near 1.05 – helped largely by the dollar’s soft performance across the board. We may be reading too much into it, but the pricing through the OIS market for next week’s European Central Bank rate meeting yesterday edged up to a 67bp hike from 54bp a day earlier. The move may be a function of some more hawkish remarks from ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane and seems to be putting the risk of a 75bp hike back on the agenda. Our house call is for 50bp.
“Our base case view assumes that this EUR/USD corrective rally stalls in the 1.05/1.06 area this month. The bigger risk of a rally probably comes more from a less hawkish Fed than a more hawkish ECB. Equally, we do see European gas prices edging higher again as a cold snap hits northern Europe. TTF natural gas prices are now back up to EUR150/MWH from 100 earlier this month,” ING analysts said.
“This will again pressure the trade balance and higher gas prices are one of the key reasons we are not more bullish on EUR/USD next year. Expect another narrow EUR/USD range today centered around 1.05. The data calendar is quite light and ECB speakers are President Christine Lagarde at 1300CET, Pablo De Cos at 1315CET and Francois Villeroy at 17CET – all seen on the dovish end of the spectrum.”
What’s moving market today
Elsewhere, we have the Swiss National Bank’s Andrea Maechler speaking at 1530CET. In addition to Fed, ECB and Bank of England rate meetings next week we also have the quarterly SNB policy decision. It looks like market pricing is split between a 25bp and 50bp hike (taking rates to 0.75-1.00%). Let’s see what she has to say today. EUR/CHF has been a bit stronger than we had expected, but assuming the SNB stays hawkish, we continue to see downside risks here.

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