US Dollar rally eases slightly as markets assess Fed policy outlook
LONDON (October 24) The US Dollar (USD) weakens slightly on Thursday ahead of a more busy day in terms of US data releases, with the Purchasing Managers Indices (PMI) data for October as the main event. Earlier on Thursday, the European PMIs came in mixed, with France contracting further in all sectors and Germany posting better-than-expected readings. Still, except for the German Services PMI, all readings for both countries – which are the Eurozone’s largest economies –remain in contraction territory.
The US calendar will also offer the PMI data, which will give insight about the state of the economy. Apart from these, the weekly Jobless Claims figures and both the Chicago Fed and Kansas City Fed activity trackers will create some additional volatility.
Daily digest market movers: Bulk load of data
- Thursday’s calendar kicks off at 12:30 GMT with the Chicago Fed National Activity Index and the weekly Jobless Claims numbers. Initial claims are expected to tick up to 242,000 from 241,000 last week.
- At 13:45 GMT, S&P Global will release its preliminary readings for the October PMIs:
- The Services PMI is expected to remain broadly stable at 55.0 from 55.2 in September.
- The Manufacturing PMI should pick up, though remain in contraction at 47.5 against 47.3 previously.
- The Composite reading stood at 54.0 in September, no forecast is available for October.
- At 15:00 GMT, the Kansas Fed Manufacturing Activity tracker for October will come in. There is no consensus view available, and the previous reading was at -18.
- The equities world turns upside down on Thursday, with China being the laggard for the first time this week while European and US equities are finally posting some gains.
- The CME Fedwatch Tool is backing a 25 basis point (bps) rate cut with an 93.0% probability against an 7.0% chance of no rate cut for the upcoming Fed meeting on November 7.
- The US 10-year benchmark rate trades at 4.19% and is trading off its high from 4.24% seen Wednesday.
FXStreet