A rising dollar, along with rising oil prices, is fueling inflationary fears


The dollar index (DXY00) hit a 9.5-month high on Friday and ended +0.65%. The dollar fell on Friday as the war in Iran showed no signs of easing, threatening to push up crude oil prices and prompting the Fed to hold off on cutting interest rates. High oil prices also threaten the economies of Europe and Japan, which rely on energy imports, weakening their currencies against the dollar.

Friday’s US economic news was mixed for the dollar after John’s personal spending, and the University of Michigan’s March US consumer sentiment index was stronger than expected, but Q4 GDP was revised lower, and new orders for John’s capital goods, non-defense old aircraft and parts, were weaker than expected.

US personal spending rose +0.4% m/m, stronger than expectations of +0.3% m/m. January personal income rose +0.4% m/m, weaker than expectations of +0.5% m/m.

The US core PCE price index, the Fed’s best inflation gauge, rose +3.1% y/y, in line with expectations and the highest in 1.75 years.

US January capital goods new orders for non-defense aircraft and parts were unchanged m/m, weaker than expected by +0.5% m/m.

US Q4 GDP was revised down to +0.7% (q/q annualized) from the previously reported +1.4% as Q4 personal consumption fell to +2.0% from the previously reported +2.4%.

The US University of Michigan consumer sentiment index fell -1.1 to 55.5, stronger than expectations of 54.8.

The US University of Michigan’s March 1-year inflation expectations were unchanged from February at 3.4%, weaker than expectations for a rise to 3.7%. March 5-10 year inflation expectations unexpectedly fell to 3.2% from 3.3% in February, weaker than expectations for a rise to 3.4%.

US JOHN JOLTS job openings rose +396,000 to 6.946 million, stronger than expectations of 6.750 million.

Exchange markets are discounting odds at 1% for a -25 bp rate cut at the next FOMC policy meeting on March 17-18.

The dollar continues to decline due to a weak outlook for interest rate differentials, with the FOMC expected to cut interest rates by at least -25 bp in 2026, while the BOJ and ECB are expected to raise rates by at least +25 bp in 2026.

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