- EUR/USD edges higher as the US Dollar drops as traders shift their focus to Fed Powell’s speech at the Jackson Hole Symposium.
- Investors look for fresh interest-rate guidance for September and the remainder of the year.
- The ECB is widely anticipated to cut interest rates again in September.
EUR/USD edges higher from the round-level support of 1.1100 as investors underpin the Euro (EUR) against the US Dollar. However, the Euro is underperforming against other major peers as markets increasingly expect the European Central Bank (ECB) to reduce interest rates again in September.
Rising expectations of ECB rate cuts in September are supported by the uncertainty over the Eurozone’s economic outlook and cooling wage pressures. The flash Eurozone HCOB PMI report for August, released on Thursday, rose to 51.2, higher than expected, indicating that overall business activity expanded at a faster pace. However, this rosy picture signaled by the PMI surveys was linked to strong demand from the Olympic Games in Paris and it is likely to be short-lived rather than structural. Therefore, the uncertainty over the economic performance in the coming months remains intact.
PMI data also signaled that business activity in the Eurozone’s largest economy, Germany, declined sharply mainly due to a significant drop in foreign demand, with no recovery in sight, signaling the need for fresh stimulus to boost demand.
Meanwhile, a sharp decline in the Q2 Negotiated Wage Rates propelled hopes of more ECB rate cuts this year. The data, which was released in Thursday’s European trading hours, showed that Negotiated Wage Rates grew at a slower pace of 3.55% from 4.74% in the first quarter this year, easing fears of inflation remaining persistent.
Economists at ING said in a note on Thursday, “The European Central Bank has remained uncomfortable with cutting interest rates while wage growth is elevated.” Lower wage growth in Q2 should help ease policymakers’ concerns in this matter.
Daily digest market movers: EUR/USD delivers a mild recovery as US Dollar drops
- EUR/USD recovers mildly to near 1.1120 in Friday’s European session after correcting from a fresh year-to-date high of 1.1174 on Thursday. The major currency pair edges higher as the US Dollar (USD) resumes its recent weakness after a decent recovery move a day earlier, amid caution ahead of Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair Jerome Powell’s speech at the Jackson Hole (JH) Symposium.
- The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback’s value against six major currencies, drops to near 101.30 after recovering from a more-than-seven-month low of 101.00 to nearly 101.60 on Thursday. The US Dollar bounced back strongly after the flash US S&P Global PMI report for August showed that the Composite PMI came in better than estimated at 54.1. Overall, the report showed that business activity was boosted by a robust expansion in the services sector, while the manufacturing part of the economy contracted at a faster-than-expected pace.
- In his speech at the JH Symposium – scheduled at 14:00 GMT – Jerome Powell is expected to provide cues on interest rates and the United States (US) economic outlook. Market participants are keen to know the size of interest rate cuts in the September meeting, given that a “vast majority” of officials said that “if the data continued to come in about as expected, it would likely be appropriate to ease policy at the next meeting,” according to Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) minutes of July 30-31 policy meeting.
- Investors also consider the chances of the US economy to achieve a “soft landing”, knowing that price pressures are on track to return to the desired rate of 2%. Fears of a potential US recession escalated after the Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report for July indicated a sharp slowdown in the labor demand and an increase in the Unemployment Rate to 4.3%, the highest level seen since November 2021.
- Analysts don’t expect Jerome Powell to provide a preset interest rate path. However, he may call rate cuts in September as appropriate, given that risks have now expanded to both aspects of dual mandate (inflation and employment).
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