Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Draghi’s turn to drag the Euro?

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The dollar has been falling since the beginning of 2017, despite the two rate hikes in March and June, and the many hawkish comments from FOMC members. Part of the blame falls upon the delay of President Trump’s economic agenda. However, most recently it was the poor economic data that led investors to question the trajectory and speed of interest rates hikes.

Janet Yellen’s testimony to Congress on Wednesday and Thursday did not help the dollar either. She did not seem confident that inflation is on the right path and Friday’s flat consumer price index raised concerns that the Fed may be done with hiking rates this year. U.S. retail sales figures added salt to the wound after recording the biggest drop in more than a year in May falling by 0.3%. The sluggishne­ss in consumer spending, wage growth and inflation will likely worry Fed officials. Furthermor­e, if the weakness persists in the next couple of month, it will prove that the slowdown in the economy is not due to transitory factors but probably structural problems. Until data takes a U-turn, dollar bulls will remain reluctant to jump in and the dollar weakness may resume in Q3.

Investors will now shift their focus to the European Central Bank and Bank of Japan. It has been almost three weeks since Mario Draghi said, “deflationa­ry forces have been replaced by reflationa­ry ones.” His confidence and bullish assessment of the euro zone recovery sent the Euro above 1.13 and despite the ECB officials’ attempts to dampen investors’ expectatio­ns over tightening policy, the Euro still appreciate­d by more than 2.5% since 27 June.

Draghi will probably choose his words more carefully when the ECB meets on Thursday. The last thing he wants is a strong Euro and tightened financial conditions for now. Since no changes are expected on current monetary policy the tweaks in the statement and Draghi’s tone are all what matters to traders. It is a complicate­d process to start normalisin­g policy without disrupting markets, and so while the ECB wants to prepare investors for a gradual wind-down of asset purchases, policy makers are likely to hint that rate hikes will remain low for a prolonged period. However, I prefer buying the Euro on dips then selling on rallies with an end-year target around 1.18.

The dollar’s weakness drove Sterling to a ten-month high to trade above 1.31 for the first time this year. The pound also found support from BoE’s Ian McCafferty who said the central bank should consider unwinding its 435billion-pound quantitati­ve easing programme earlier than planned and that he’s looking to vote for a rate rise again in August. It seems that monetary policy is having more weight than the Brexit talks; if Tuesday’s inflation figures from the U.K. surprise to the upside, expect GBP to continue rallying. However, traders should also keep a close eye on Brexit negotiatio­ns that resumed on Monday.

China reported second quarter growth on Monday that topped expectatio­ns. GDP matched analyst expectatio­ns of 1.7% growth quarter-onquarter, with year-on-year GDP growth at 6.9%, pushing world stock markets to record highs, closely monitored by Aussie traders.

The RBA minutes were scheduled for release on Tuesday, followed by the employment report on Thursday. It requires another set of positive reports to further widen the differenti­als in bond yields; however, without a shift in monetary policy stance the Aussie gains are likely to be limited.

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