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US markets regained strength overnight with DOW and S&P 500 closed at record highs as selloff in tech stocks stabilized. DOW gained 92.8 pts, or 0.44% to end the day at 21328.47. S&P 500 rose 10.96 pts, or 0.45% to close at 2440.35. However, no strength was seen in treasury yields as 10 year yield lost -0.006 to close at 2.207, staying well below 2.297 resistance and maintains near term bearish outlook. In the currency markets, Canadian Dollar remains the strongest one as boosted by hawkish twist in BoC officials' rhetorics. Meanwhile, Dollar is trading as the weakest major currency for the week. The development argues that traders could be quite concerned with a dovish FOMC hike today.
Fed to hike but focus on projections and vote
FOMC meeting is the major focus of the day. Fed is widely expected to raise the federal fund rate by 25bps to 1.00-1.25%. Markets are pricing in near 100% chance of that and there is little chance for Fed to give us a surprise there. But traders are very cautious as it's now getting more unsure on whether Fed will hike again in September. The new economic projections to be released today will probably hold the first key to this. The vote split for today's decision will be another hint on how divided the committee is regarding the economic outlook. Fed chair Janet Yellen will likely release more information on Fed's plan to shrink its balance sheet too.
Dollar selling might accelerate if EUR/USD breaks 1.13 firmly
Technically, dollar is staying generally bearish except versus Sterling. EUR/USD is holding above 1.1109 support and is mildly in favor to take out 1.1298 key resistance, which would carry larger bullish implications. USD/JPY is holding below 111.70 resistance, which suggests that fall from 114.36 is still in progress for 108.12 and below, to extend the larger decline from 118.65 (Dec high). USD/CAD breached 1.3222 key support level which now further affirms the case of medium term reversal and puts1.3 handle into focus. Overall, the greenback will be vulnerable if Fed hints at a rate path that is slower than originally planned. And a strong break of 1.13 in EUR/USD could trigger accelerated selloff in the greenback.
On the data front
China industrial production rose 6.5% yoy in May, fixed assets investments rose 8.6% yoy, retail sales rose 10.7% yoy. Japan industrial production was finalized at 4.0% mom in April. Australia Westpac consumer confidence dropped -1.8% in June. New Zealand current account balance turned into NZD 0.24b surplus in Q1.
German CPI was finalized at -0.2% mom, 1.5% yoy in May. UK employment data will be a key focus in European session. Sterling will look into the data for more upside momentum while traders await tomorrow's BoE announcement. Eurozone will release industrial production and employment.
While FOMC rate decision and press conference is the major focus, Dollar will first face the test of CPI in early US session. Retail sales and business inventories will also be released.
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