Dollar stabilises as markets shift focus to FOMC rate decision
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The clearing out of stale dollar long positions over the last few weeks appears to have allowed the greenback to stabilise somewhat after its sharp sell-off so far in March.
It’s just possible that the spotlight this week will temporarily shift away from Trump’s erratic policies and towards the raft of central bank announcements on tap. In the span of less than 24 hours from Wednesday to Thursday we will hear from the Fed, the BoJ, the Riksbank, the BoE and the SNB. Of those, only the last one is expected to lower rates, but markets will be closely following the Fed’s and the BoE’s reaction to the apparent slowdown experienced by both economies.
GBP
The Bank of England is expected to hold interest rates at a relatively high 4.5% level at its March meeting on Thursday, with swap markets currently pricing in no more than around a 1-in-10 chance of another cut. Of greater unpredictability will be the actual voting split among MPC members. All nine officials on the committee were in support of an immediate rate reduction at the last meeting in February, with two unexpectedly opting for a 50bp cut. We suspect that the vote will be split 7-2 on this occasion, with the two hawks to favour a 25bp move, while the rest vote for no change.
Prior to the meeting, however, we will get some crucial labour market data for January and February. Arguably the most important will be the wage growth figures, which are expected to remain around 6% – a level incompatible with a return to inflation targets, hence the Bank of England’s caution. It will be interesting to see whether the government’s NI business tax raid is reflected in the data. If so, we could see some softness in GBP this week.
EUR
The euro continues to ride the wave of optimism around massive German fiscal loosening and the tweaking to the debt brake, which was agreed upon in the Bundestag last week. The deal will allow Europe’s largest economy to massively overhaul its fiscal policy, enabling a €500 billion infrastructure investment over the next decade or so, and an exemption that will allow defence spending to rise above 1% of the country’s GDP. Markets are betting that the news will provide a much needed boost to the economy, while also limiting the need for further aggressive interest rate cuts from the ECB, both of which are bullish for the euro.
Hints of capital reallocation from US stocks to cheaper European ones, a thesis supported by the strong outperformance in the latter in 2025, also appear to be providing the euro with some tailwinds. In a week with little newsflow of note out of the Eurozone, we expect tariff headlines to be the main driver of the common currency.
USD
Fears of a US economic slowdown, brought on by Trump’s erratic policy making and hefty import levies, have driven down US stocks and the dollar in the last few weeks. Interestingly, Treasury yields have not moved down in tandem, as one would expect, and are fairly close to where they were when the stock market sell off began. We note that labour market data out of the US economy has yet to indicate any meaningful weakening. This includes the most timely read on the jobs markets, initial jobless claims, which are largely continuing to hover at very healthy levels around the 220k mark.
The Federal Reserve will likely commit to a wait-and-see stance this week. There will be no change in rates, and the updated ‘dot plot’ will probably leave options open to lower rates at only a gradual pace. With a potential slowdown in the US economy on the way, the raft of economic reports out this week will take on added importance, in particular retail sales figures for February (Monday).