• The biggest moves in markets ahead of tonight’s Fed policy meeting happened in the Japanese yen. A not completely expected rate hike to 0.25% by the Bank of Japan this morning, accompanied by a bond taper programme, took some investors off guard. In a hawkish presser afterwards, governor Ueda said that if the economy evolves according to the outlook, more rate hikes will follow, possibly beyond neutral (+/-0.5%). Ueda added that the weak currency was an argument to raise the rate today, along with increased confidence of a consumer-driven sustained return to the 2% inflation target. USD/JPY is testing the 150 barrier, the lowest level since mid-March on JPY strength (rather than USD-weakness that drove much of the recent USD/JPY decline). European markets eyeballed the EMU inflation print. Prices in July evolved in a not so comfortable way for the ECB. The headline figure was flat m/m, allowing the y/y figure to unexpectedly pick up from 2.5% to 2.6%. Core inflation stood at a June-matching 2.9%, defying expectations for a minor deceleration. And services inflation, lastly, barely eased from the 4.1% in June to 4% this month – a level deemed too high to reconcile with the ECB’s overall 2% target. An attempt of European/German yields to reverse earlier declines quickly faded to nothing and returned towards intraday lows. Net daily changes vary between 3.2-3.8 bps. The euro did hold on to some minor gains against the dollar (EUR/USD around 1.084) as the former was weighed down by a drop in US yields as well (2-4 bps)-. Q2 Employment Cost Index – the Fed’s preferred wage measure – came in a tad below consensus, ie 0.9% vs 1% (4.1% y/y, the slowest advance since 2021). Both wages & salaries (the base compensation component) as well as benefits eased compared to the previous quarter, suggesting moderating wage growth in a ditto labour market. The latter was also confirmed by the ADP job report printing at sub-par 122k. • We are now headed towards tonight’s FOMC meeting. The Fed’s status quo at 5.25-5.5% is widely anticipated. The central question is whether the recent string of beneficial CPI outcomes and mostly below-consensus economic outcomes will prompt clearer clues towards a first cut (in September) in either the statement or the presser. We think there’s a possibility of that to happen, be it subtle in order to prevent the recent sharp yield correction go much further against the background of thinner liquidity circumstances and technical support zones at the verge of breaking. Complementing the case for (short-term) yields not to drop much lower from current levels is the current pricing in money markets (almost three cuts priced in for 2024). The four cuts for 2025, as things currently stand, seem appropriate as well. First support for the dollar kicks in at EUR/USD 1.09. That should hold.
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