Dollar Demise Intensifies

 | Oct 15, 2015 12:51

Lackluster U.S data over the past 24-hours (retail sale, PPI and beige book) has further diminished the market odds for a 2015 rate lift off (Oct. +2.5%, Dec. +32.5%). This is putting the dollar very much on the back foot across the board (dollar index hitting a three-month low), a relief for EM and some commodity sensitive currency pairs in particular. The ‘lower for longer’ debate is giving global equities the “green” light, despite some mixed U.S earnings reports this week, and has U.S 10-years trading again below the psychological +2% handle (+1.975%). The markets focus will now return stateside to today’s release of CPI data, the last inflationary snapshot for the Fed to consider ahead of their next meeting in two-weeks time. Market expectations are for a second consecutive negative print (-0.2% m/m).

Down-under rate debate heats up: A Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) rate cut expectations are on the rise again, especially after the neutral or debatable soft Aussie employment report in the overnight session. The FI market is also focusing on the rise in mortgage rates, suggesting that a further ease by the RBA will be required to help the consumer, as higher mortgages will only add to the risks of higher unemployment. Australia employment change recorded its first decline in five-months (-5k vs. +10k e). Certainly not a bad headline, but the mix from full-time to part-time job losses was disappointing (FT fell -13.9k while PT increased +8.9k). The jobless rate held steady at + 6.2%, while the participation rate slowed. On the bright side, the total hours worked were at an eight-month high.