Trump Vs. FOMC: Which Will Be Biggest FX Disruptor?

 | Jan 30, 2018 15:22

By Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management.

The wild swings that we saw in the FX market on Tuesday gave us a taste of the bigger moves that could transpire over the next 24 hours. There was little rhyme or reason for the day’s volatile price action with investors buying U.S. dollars into the European open, selling aggressively in the first half of the London trading session only to drive USD back up after U.S. equities opened for trading. The greenback ended the day lower against all of the major currencies with the exception of the Australian dollar. Turnaround Tuesday lived up to its reputation but we think it is the 2 big events and month-end flows that led to the unusually volatile trading session. U.S. data was better than expected with consumers growing more confident in January while November house prices increased by 0.75%. Of course all of this is a distraction from the main events this week – President Trump’s State of the Union Address, the FOMC meeting and January Nonfarm Payrolls.

It is hard to predict how market moving President Trump’s State of the Union will be.
While there’s no doubt that he will tout the strength of the economy, the decline in the unemployment rate, gains in stocks and passage of the tax-reform bill, he could also inflame trade tensions, exacerbate geopolitical risks and set back U.S. funding talks. A lot can go wrong during the address that could have significant ramifications for the forex market. Creating more global uncertainty (political or economic) would drive the dollar lower and the yen higher. It would also exacerbate the slide in the Dow, which declined as much as 400 points Tuesday. There is a far more significant risk to the downside than upside for the U.S. dollar, U.S. assets and risk appetite. However if Trump focuses on the economy and skirts over Russia, North Korea, NAFTA and other trade issues, a wave of relief will send the dollar higher. The market’s reaction to Trump’s speech will set the tone for trading in Europe and early North America. It could even overshadow the FOMC announcement later in the day.

Wednesday’s FOMC meeting will be Janet Yellen’s last. No changes are expected to interest rates but everyone believes that Yellen will leave on a high note.
The FOMC statement will be upbeat and some economists even expect the Fed to upgrade its balance of risks and inflation statement. If they are right, the dollar will rise with the magnitude dependent on post-Trump moves. In the event that the USD/JPY trades above 108.50 pre-FOMC, we could see a 75- to 100-pip reaction to a more hawkish FOMC statement. Investors are currently pricing in a 93% chance of a March rate hike and a change in the risk assessment will go a long way in helping the U.S. dollar catch up to market expectations. However if the statement remains unchanged with very little adjustments, or Trump’s comments overshadow FOMC, we could see USD/JPY fall to 108.00. Taking a look at the table below, since the December meeting the U.S. economy was mixed. The most significant changes were in market dynamics with the dollar falling, which is inflationary, 10-year yields rising 36bp and the S&P 500 shooting up 7% to fresh record highs. Yellen isn’t likely to address any of this (especially with no press conference) as she lets her successor Jerome Powell deal with the consequences.

Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now