Dollar Stabilizing As Trump Said He Wants A Strong Currency

Published 01/26/2018, 02:19 AM
Updated 03/09/2019, 08:30 AM

After being pressured for most of the week, Dollar is trying to stabilize after US President Donald Trump said he wants a strong Dollar. But so far, there is little sign of sustainable rebound yet. The greenback is still vulnerable to another selloff. The key to whether Dollar could reverse recent fortune might lie in Q4 GDP. Sterling remains one of the strongest one this week and will also look into UK GDP for more strengthen. Euro jumped overnight after ECB President Mario Draghi's comment but there was no follow through buying.

Trump said he "wants" a strong Dollar

Trump said in a CNBC interview in Davos, Switzerland, that he wants to "see a strong dollar". He said that Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's comments earlier this week were "taken out of context". Trump added that "no. 1 I don't like talking about it because frankly nobody should be talking about it. It should be what it is, it should also be based on the strength of the country - we are doing so well. Our country is becoming so economically strong again and strong in other ways too, by the way that the dollar is going to get stronger and stronger and ultimately I want to see a strong dollar." Dollar gained some footing after Trump but there is no sign of a reversal yet.

SNB Jordan: Forex usually focuses on fundamentals

SNB Chairman Thomas Jordan said in Davos that he didn't believe trade war is imminent. He noted that "every time monetary policy changes somewhere, the spillovers are bigger than in the past, because the interest rate instrument is not available as it used to be." And, therefore, "maybe we should not focus on daily volatility". He added that "usually the foreign exchange market will refocus on fundamentals again and also correct again." Regarding the Swiss Franc, he said that "what we don't look at is specific exchange rates" Ad, "we look at all the exchanges together and see what is the impact on the Swiss economy and then, if necessary, decide whether to intervene or not."

ECB maintained policy and forward guidance unchanged

Yesterday, ECB left the policy rates unchanged, with the main refinancing rate, the marginal lending rate and the deposit rate staying at 0%, 0.25% and -0.40% respectively. The pace of asset purchases also stayed unchanged at 30B euro per month until September, or beyond, if necessary. President Mario Draghi attempted to downplay speculations that the central bank would soon adjust the forward guidance, as interpreted by many following the December meeting minutes. Meanwhile, he stressed that any rate hike would be 'well past' the end of asset purchases. Draghi also warned of the impacts of the strong euro on growth and complained about the US for talking down the greenback at the World Economic Forum. More in Euro Rallied Further Despite Draught's Attempt To Downplay Forward Guidance Adjustment

On the data front

Japan national CPI core was unchanged at 0.9% yoy in December. Tokyo CPI core slowed to 0.7% yoy in January. Corporate services price rose 0.8% yoy in December. Eurozone M3 will be released in European session. But main focus will be on UK Q4 GDP. Later in the day, Canada will release CPI. US will release Q4 GDP and durable orders.

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