Weaker American Inflation Drives the Dollar Down

In This Article:

The decline in inflation in June announced on 11 July was the third successive month of the rate falling and might suggest an ongoing downward trend. All four main releases – core and non-core annual and monthly – were lower than the consensus, with the reaction by the dollar so far being strongly negative in most cases. This article summarises the context of the latest data on inflation and what they might mean for the policy of the Federal Reserve (‘the Fed’) later this year then looks briefly at the charts of USDJPY and GBPJPY.

Annual headline inflation in the USA has now declined to its lowest in a year:

American annual headline inflation
American annual headline inflation

This was also the first time monthly CPI declined in more than four years. The lower readings from annual figures were due primarily to declining costs of energy, but shelter, vehicles and transport also contributed. However, food inflation increased very slightly.

The Fed has repeatedly stated that it needs to see evidence of inflation declining sustainably towards the target of 2% before it embarks on a cycle of loosening policy. It’s questionable whether they’ve found that yet: in early 2023 the downward trend for inflation ended and the headline figure stuck at or above 3%.

According to CME FedWatch Tool, the probability of at least one cut by the Fed’s meeting on 18 September is now around 89%, indicating near certainty among participants. The likelihood of at least two cuts by the last meeting of the year in December is very similar at around 88%. Neither of these are a huge change from last week or last month but confidence in this scenario has increased since the latest release of inflation.

There are still two more releases of the consumer price index before the Fed’s meeting on 18 September. If these are higher than expected, which doesn’t seem extremely unlikely, the probabilities for monetary loosening would change. Traders will continue to monitor job data and GDP in the next few weeks as well, while coverage of the presidential race will remain omnipresent.

Dollar-yen, Daily

The dollar’s losses against the yen come as a result of lower American inflation and increasing expectations that the Bank of Japan (‘the BoJ’) might start to be more aggressive in normalising policy and generally trying to support the yen. The performance of the Japanese economy in recent years based on GDP has been weak and the extended divergence in policy between the BoJ and all other major central banks has fuelled the carry trade and weakened sentiment on the yen.

¥158.30 is an important area: this was the closing high in late April and is only slightly above the 61.8% weekly Fibonacci extension. A move clearly below there is questionable unless there’s an intervention by the BoJ or Japanese government or if participants become more certain that the former will hike again on 31 July. A retest of recent highs around ¥162 before the trend retraces significantly or even possibly reverses might be more likely.