TOKYO, Dec 20 (Reuters) – The U.S. dollar held steady on
Wednesday against a basket of peers as traders weighed the
chances that the U.S. Federal Reserve would soon begin cutting
interest rates.
Fed officials have been pushing back after last week’s
Federal Open Market Committee meeting saw three rate cuts
penciled in for 2024, sparking a rally in financial markets.
Market participants are pricing in a 69% chance of the first
cut happening at the Fed’s March meeting, followed by a 63.3%
probability of another in May, the CME FedWatch tool shows.
“The proverbial genie is out of the bottle now, and the Fed
either has to accept that and risk easing policy prematurely or
push back very hard and cause a bit of volatility in the
markets,” said Kyle Rodda, senior financial market analyst at
Capital.com.
On Tuesday, Raphael Bostic, president of the Atlanta Federal
Reserve, reiterated that he expected two rate cuts in the second
half of the year, but added there was no “urgency” now.
The same day, Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said
whether the central bank can deliver on forecasts of rate cuts
depends on how the economy performs.
The dollar index inched up 0.13% to 102.25, after
sliding more than 0.3% the previous day and touching a
four-month low of 101.76 last week.
The greenback’s movement will depend on economic data
supporting the rate cuts that have been priced in, said Rodda.
“The U.S. dollar is the inverse of the so-called ‘everything
rally,’ which will beat on if the data confirms the need for
cuts next year,” he added.
The Fed’s preferred measure of underlying inflation, the
core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, is due
this Thursday, and could show whether inflation has slowed
enough for the Fed to begin easing policy next year.
The euro eased 0.19% to $1.0958, while sterling
was last trading at $1.2715.
The yen consolidated around 143.73 against the greenback
after falling as low as 144.95 the previous day.
The Japanese currency had been trading around the 142 range
on Tuesday before the Bank of Japan said it had left monetary
policy unchanged and its chief, Kazuo Ueda, gave no hints of an
imminent end to negative interest rates.
“The last thing (the BOJ) wants to do is to have to undo (a
rate hike) again in a couple of months’ time,” said Rob Carnell,
Asia-Pacific head of research at ING.
Amid uncertainty over the global economic outlook and
potential rate cuts by the Fed next year, he added, “It’s not a
great environment to be hiking. (The BOJ) really wants to be
sure that the domestic situation is looking OK.”
The offshore Chinese yuan edged lower against the greenback
to $7.1359 as China stood pat on benchmark lending loan prime
rates (LPRs) at the monthly fixing, matching market
expectations.
The Australian dollar was mostly flat at $0.6766, just off a
fresh five-month high of $0.6777.
The kiwi was last at $0.6276, after touching its highest
since July 20 at $0.6282 earlier in the trading session.
In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin was up 1.6% at
$42,922.00.
(Reporting by Brigid Riley; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)