Dollar Weakens Despite Hawkish Fed And Fresh Tariff Warnings
24 Fevereiro 2025 - 6:45AM
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The U.S. Dollar retreated against major currencies during the
week ended February 21 despite fresh tariff warnings and a tone of
caution in the Fed minutes released during the week. The U.S.
Dollar retreated against the British pound, the Australian Dollar
as well as the Japanese yen but held firm against the euro. The
6-currency Dollar Index also edged down during the week.
The holiday-shortened week began with fresh tariff warnings from
President Trump. According to Reuters, U.S. President Donald Trump
said on Tuesday that he intends to impose auto tariffs "in the
neighborhood of 25%" and similar duties on semiconductors and
pharmaceutical imports, the latest in a series of measures
threatening to upend international trade. The comments triggered a
spike in bond yields and a strengthening of the U.S. Dollar.
The dollar strengthened further with the cautious tone in the
minutes of the Federal Open Markets Committee released on
Wednesday. The minutes revealed an elevated uncertainty regarding
the scope, timing, and potential economic effects of possible
changes to trade, immigration, fiscal, and regulatory policies on
the Fed's monetary policy outlook.
The minutes revealed that participants generally pointed out the
upside risks to the inflation outlook. Members noted that though
inflation had eased significantly over the past two years, the
progress towards the Committee's 2 percent longer-run goal had
slowed over the past year. Many participants emphasized that
additional evidence of continued disinflation would be needed to
support the view that inflation was returning sustainably to 2
percent. The renewed focus on inflationary pressures contained in
the FOMC minutes ensured that Fed rate cut expectations remained
weak, lifting the Dollar Index to the week's high of 107.38.
The Dollar however tumbled to the week's low of 106.33 on
Thursday in the backdrop of a Fed official's concerns over the
employment outlook. Raphael Bostic, President and Chief Executive
Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta in an essay
published on Thursday placed on record his concerns about potential
vulnerabilities in the labor market.
Though Bostic viewed the employment outlook as stable, he
acknowledged that signs of slowing are accumulating. Relying on
data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. he cited the lower
probabilities for unemployed workers to find jobs and the longer
average stint of unemployment as an indication of clear softening
in the labor market. He also pointed out that the "quits rate," the
percentage of all workers who voluntarily leave a job in a given
month had declined to levels last seen in 2015, excluding the
pandemic years.
Bostic also raised concerns about the narrowing employment
growth as three key sectors viz healthcare and social assistance,
leisure and hospitality, and government accounted for roughly
three-quarters of job growth in the past year versus about 45
percent in the pre-pandemic years.
The U.S. dollar strengthened on Friday as investors digested the
tariff threats from President Donald Trump. Geopolitical concerns
also contributed to safe haven demand, allowing the greenback to
rebound to 106.61. The index had closed at 106.71 a week earlier
implying a weekly decline of 0.09 percent.
The euro declined 0.31 percent against the U.S. dollar during
the week ended February 21 amidst concerns about the impact of U.S.
tariffs on growth in the Euro Area. Dragged down by the prevailing
political and economic uncertainty, the EUR/USD pair which had
closed at 1.0491 on February 14 slipped to 1.0458 by February 21.
The pair traded between a high of 1.0507 recorded on both Monday
and Friday and the low of 1.0401 recorded on Wednesday.
The British pound however rallied against the U.S. Dollar, with
the GBP/USD pair adding 0.36 percent during the week ended February
21 amidst an unexpected acceleration in inflation. The pound
sterling closed on February 21 at $1.2630, versus $1.2585 a week
earlier. The pair which had fallen to the weekly low of 1.2562 on
Wednesday climbed to the weekly high of 1.2681 by Friday. Data
released during the week had shown inflation vastly higher than
expected, unemployment lower than expected, a slight improvement in
consumer confidence and retail sales that surpassed market
expectations.
The AUD/USD pair recorded an increase of 0.08 percent during the
week ended February 21. From the closing level of 0.6350 on
February 14, the pair increased to 0.6355 by February 21. The
currency pair's movements came amidst the Reserve Bank of Australia
reducing rates as widely expected but warning that the battle
against inflation was not over yet. The RBA also hinted at a
cautious stance on further monetary policy easing. The pair's
trading ranged between the low of 0.6327 on Thursday and the high
of 0.6410 on Friday.
In the past week, the USD/JPY pair slipped close to 2 percent,
dropping to 149.29 by February 21, from 152.33 a week earlier. The
pair traded between the high of 152.41 on Monday and the low of
148.92 on Friday. Data released on Friday had showed that Japan's
headline inflation jumped to 4 percent, the highest since January
2023 and core inflation touched 3.2 percent, a level last seen in
June 2023. However, as rate hike expectations lifted bond yields to
levels last seen in November 2009, Bank of Japan's Governor stepped
in to warn of increased bond buying to counter the spike in
government bond yields.
All eyes are now on the major data releases on the horizon. The
GFK Consumer Confidence reading from Germany is due on Wednesday.
Durable Goods orders and the second estimate of fourth quarter GDP
readings are due from the U.S. on Thursday. Inflation readings from
the France and Germany are also anticipated in the week.
Nevertheless, the spotlight is on the Fed-preferred PCE-based
inflation readings due from the U.S. on Friday.
Amidst the anxiety, the Dollar Index has increased to 106.64.
The EUR/USD pair has increased to 1.0462 whereas the GBP/USD pair
has slipped 1.2622. The AUD/USD pair has in the meanwhile dropped
to 0.6351. The USD/JPY pair has strengthened to 149.47.