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Home.forex news reportDollar Rises Alongside T-Note Yields

Dollar Rises Alongside T-Note Yields

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The dollar index (DXY00) on Tuesday rose by +0.30% but remained below Monday’s 3.5-week high.  The dollar rallied on Tuesday as higher T-note yields strengthened the dollar’s interest rate differentials.  Also, comments on Tuesday from Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin were supportive of the dollar when he said he expects tax cuts and deregulation to lift growth this year. The dollar still has some safe-haven support due to the escalation of geopolitical risks in Venezuela after the US captured Venezuelan President Maduro, and US President Trump said the US plans to temporarily “run” Venezuela.

Bearish factors for the dollar on Tuesday included (1) stock market strength that curbed liquidity demand for the dollar, (2) the downward revision to the Dec S&P services PMI, and (3) dovish comments from Fed Governor Stephen Miran, who said he expects more than 100 bp of Fed rate cuts this year.

The US Dec S&P services PMI was revised downward by -0.4 to 52.5 from the previously reported 52.9.

Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin said he expects tax cuts and deregulation to lift growth this year, and that the outlook for monetary policy remains in a “delicate balance” given the conflicting pressures from rising unemployment and still-high inflation.

Fed Governor Stephen Miran said Fed policy is “clearly restrictive and holding the economy back and I think that well over 100 basis points of rate cuts are going to be justified this year.”

The markets are discounting the odds at 18% for a -25 bp rate cut at the FOMC’s next meeting on January 27-28.

The dollar continues to see underlying weakness as the FOMC is expected to cut interest rates by about -50 bp in 2026, while the BOJ is expected to raise rates by another +25 bp in 2026, and the ECB is expected to leave rates unchanged in 2026.

The dollar is also under pressure as the Fed boosts liquidity in the financial system, having begun purchasing $40 billion a month in T-bills in mid-December.  The dollar is also being undercut by concerns that President Trump intends to appoint a dovish Fed Chair, which would be bearish for the dollar.  Mr. Trump recently said that he will announce his selection for the new Fed Chair in early 2026.  Bloomberg reported that National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett is the most likely choice as the next Fed Chair, seen by markets as the most dovish candidate.



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