Power Shift: How Trump's Victory Transforms Dollar Dynamics
Saturday, November 16, 2024 (Week 46)
As we head into a crucial trading week, market focus centres intensely on the Federal Reserve's response to Trump's unexpected election victory. With key economic releases due, including Flash PMIs and housing data, traders are reassessing their dollar positions amid dramatically shifted policy expectations.
Market Themes and Narratives: Political Shift Drives Dollar Dynamics
The dominant theme transforming US markets has been the seismic impact of Trump's return to the White House. This political development triggered the Dow's strongest session since 2022, jumping over 1,500 points. Markets are rapidly repricing Fed rate cut expectations, with the probability of a December cut plunging from 80% to 60%. The dollar index has surged past 106, reflecting growing conviction that Trump's proposed policies – including significant tariffs, tax cuts, and deregulation – will fuel inflationary pressures and delay monetary easing.
The emerging theme revolves around mounting concerns over trade war risks. Trump's threats of 60% tariffs on Chinese goods and aggressive stance toward European trade have injected significant uncertainty into global markets. This has manifested in widening interest rate differentials and heightened safe-haven flows into the dollar, particularly evident in the sharp rise in Treasury yields.
Geopolitics: Trade Tensions Reshape Currency Landscape
The US stands at a pivotal moment with Trump's cabinet appointments suggesting an imminent hardening of trade policy. His potential selection of China hawks for key positions has amplified market anxiety about escalating trade tensions. Most significantly, the nomination of Marco Rubio as Secretary of State signals a potentially more confrontational approach to international relations.
Recent developments include:
Cabinet appointments driving risk-off sentiment
Growing concerns over US-China trade relations
Uncertainty surrounding European trade negotiations
Middle East tensions adding to safe-haven flows
Central Bank and Monetary Policy: Fed's Shifting Calculus
Fed Chair Powell's recent Dallas speech emphasised strong US economic growth provides flexibility in policy decisions. The Fed funds rate remains at 4.75%, with markets dramatically reducing expectations for aggressive easing.
Key policy developments:
Fed officials signalling caution on rate cuts
Markets pricing reduced probability of December easing
Growing focus on inflationary impact of Trump's policies
Powell emphasising data-dependent approach
Economic Indicators: Growth Momentum Amid Policy Shift
GDP Growth (Q3 2024): 2.8% annualised
Below 3% forecast
Consumer spending rose 3.7%
Government spending increased 5%
Inflation (October 2024):
Headline CPI: 2.6% YoY
Core CPI: 3.3% YoY
PCE Price Index: 2.1% YoY
Labour Market:
Unemployment: 4.1%
Nonfarm Payrolls: 12K (significantly below 113K forecast)
Average Hourly Earnings: +0.4% MoM
Recent Surprises:
NY Empire Manufacturing: 31.2 (highest since December 2021)
Retail Sales: +0.4% MoM (above 0.3% forecast)
Import Prices: +0.3% MoM (versus -0.1% forecast)
Intermarkets: Cross-Asset Momentum Shift
Stocks:
S&P 500: +23.08% YTD
Projected to reach 5836.62 by quarter-end
Trump-sensitive sectors leading gains
Bonds:
10-year yield at 4.44%
Expected to moderate to 4.38% by quarter-end
Yield curve steepening on inflation concerns
Commodities:
Oil prices volatile on geopolitical tensions
Gold pressured by rising real yields
Base metals responding to trade war concerns
The Currency: Dollar Strength Set to Persist
Current Positioning: The DXY trades at 106, showing remarkable resilience amid global uncertainty.
Recent Market Moving Events:
Trump's election victory (Bullish)
Reduced Fed rate cut expectations (Bullish)
Strong NY Empire State data (Bullish)
Mixed labour market signals (Neutral)
Forward-Looking Catalysts:
Political Transition (Bullish Impact)
Cabinet appointments
Policy implementation timeline
Trade negotiation stance
Monetary Policy (Bullish Impact)
Delayed rate cut expectations
Inflation focus
Growth resilience
Economic Data (Mixed Impact)
Flash PMIs due next week
Housing market indicators
Consumer sentiment readings
Analysis suggests the dollar will maintain its upward trajectory, targeting 107 by year-end. This projection is supported by:
Shifting monetary policy expectations
Safe-haven flows amid geopolitical uncertainty
Relative economic outperformance
Conclusion
Trump's victory fundamentally alters the dollar's trajectory through changed policy expectations
Fed rate cut timeline likely extends further than previously anticipated
Trade tensions set to dominate price action in coming weeks
Sources: Federal Reserve, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Treasury, Trading Economics, Bloomberg, Reuters.