Strength for the Dollar as the Fed Looks More Hawkish

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The Federal Reserve (‘the Fed’) cut its funds rate to 4.25-4.5% on Wednesday 18 December as widely expected, but the primary intrigue from the meeting was the new dot plot indicating that only two cuts are likely next year. This gave the dollar significant tailwinds and challenged many other instruments. This article summarises recent news and data affecting American monetary policy then looks briefly at the charts of gold and bitcoin.

The likelihood of only two cuts by the Fed in 2025 is a significant change from the previous dot plot which suggested four. The Fed has also revised its expectations for growth in the USA upward compared to September; GDP is now expected to go up 2.5% in 2024 and 2.1% next year. The outlook for inflation was also revised up and unemployment down. A small majority of participants now expects the Fed to hold until the second quarter of 2025:

Source: CME FedWatch
Source: CME FedWatch

Although there had been some possibility that the Fed would slow down further next year since last month, that wasn’t the consensus view until after the latest meeting. On the whole, GDP has been significantly stronger than expected in 2024 while inflation started to rise again in October. It’s not clear yet whether the latest increases by inflation are the beginning of a new trend, so traders are likely to watch CPI and PCE closely over the next several months for clues on when the Fed might cut again.

This new situation is basically negative for gold, but the overall context is more ambiguous for cyclical instruments like shares and many cryptocurrencies. While higher rates are a challenge, the generally positive economic situation stands in sharp contrast to long-running expectations for a recession.

Next week is particularly inactive in terms of scheduled news and data because of the holidays in many major countries. However, volatility might increase just before Christmas: a ‘Santa rally’ seems to be possible based on the mostly sharp reactions to the news from the Fed, but that depends on sentiment.

Gold Still Reluctant to Push Below $2,600

Gold’s reaction to the news of only two likely cuts next year was pretty typical. Demand is likely to be at least somewhat lower than in the first three quarters of 2024 now that rates will probably remain higher for longer. However, demand for havens is unlikely to decrease significantly in the near future amid turbulence in Syria and Donald Trump’s upcoming inauguration.

The initial reaction to the Fed’s meeting seems to have been somewhat excessive, with the price retracing around half of the loss on 19 December. There’s been no clear increase in the volume of selling. $2,600 seems like a moderately strong area of support based on the bounces from there in late November and around 6 December.