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Share link:In this post: The yen hit a one-year high against the dollar as markets bet on a possible 50-basis-point rate cut from the Fed this week. Treasury yields are dropping fast, adding pressure on the dollar, while other currencies like the euro and pound are also benefiting. The BoJ is expected to keep rates steady, but the narrowing interest rate gap with the US is driving the yen higher.
The yen surged to its highest level in a year, pushing the dollar into a corner as the market braces for a potential bombshell from the Federal Reserve tomorrow.
Investors are betting big that the Fed might pull an unexpected move and deliver a far more aggressive cut than the widely expected 25-basis-point.
Right now, the dollar is down 0.10%, trading at 140.690 yen. This has rattled the futures market, which now predicts a 61% chance of a 50-basis-point cut, up from just 15% last week.
Market gets edgy, treasury yields plummet
US Treasury yields are sliding fast. Over the last two weeks, 10-year yields have fallen by 30 basis points.
On Monday, two-year Treasury yields—more directly tied to Fed policies—dropped another 2.5 basis points, landing at 3.5509%, after sitting at 3.94% just two weeks ago.
The DXY, which tracks the greenback against six major currencies, dropped 0.29% to 100.73. Other currencies took advantage of the dollar’s weakness.
The British pound jumped 0.64% to $1.3206, and the euro climbed 0.42%, hitting $1.1123. Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex, said:
“Most of this action is the result of speculation over the Fed’s next move. The market was cool with a 25-basis-point hike, but now the idea of a 50-basis-point cut is fueling these swings.”
All eyes on the Bank of Japan
Investors are also keeping a close eye on the Bank of Japan (BOJ), which is set to announce its own interest rate decision on Friday.
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While the BOJ is expected to keep its short-term policy rate unchanged at 0.25%, the narrowing gap between US and Japanese interest rates has pushed the yen higher.
This has triggered billions of dollars in unwinding yen-funded carry trades. The bank has already raised rates twice this year, and some of its board members want to raise them even higher.
Bank of Japan headquarters in Tokyo
“The market is pricing in the likelihood of more BOJ moves down the road,” said Chandler.
Meanwhile, the European Central Bank (ECB) cut its interest rate by 25 basis points last week, but ECB President Christine Lagarde has made it clear that another cut isn’t coming anytime soon.
Peter Kazimir, a member of the ECB’s Governing Council, said that the bank should wait until December before making another rate cut to avoid a policy mistake.
Is a soft landing coming?
The Fed’s rate decision comes at a time when inflation has been steadily cooling.
Inflation hit a peak of 9.1% in June 2022 but has since dropped to about 2.5% as of August, bringing it closer to the Fed’s long-term target of 2%.
The slowdown in inflation is partly due to improved supply chains, which had been wrecked by the pandemic and Russia-Ukraine conflict.
As those pressures eased, prices for goods dropped. Consumers are also switching back to pre-pandemic spending patterns, with a better focus on services over goods.
The unemployment rate stands at 3.6%, the lowest it’s been in over five decades. Job growth has been steady, with 43 straight months of employment gains.
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