USD: Some Short-Lived Softening
Equity markets are enjoying a short period of calm as 4Q earnings reports continue to come in. Despite the US 'tech-wreck', other sectors of the equity markets are doing quite well, with the KBW Banks Index for example approaching a high in the US and the Euro Stoxx banks index breaking to a new high in Europe. A more stable risk environment is allowing some recovery of the recently battered commodity currencies (e.g. the Australian dollar) and some further gains for the emerging market high yielders, such as the Brazilian real.
However, the start of major tightening cycles in both the US and Europe does not look the best time to be searching for carry (even though 11% per annum implied yields in Brazil are attractive) and the benign environment could easily be unwound with an above consensus US January CPI reading tomorrow.
On that subject, both Brazil and Mexico release January CPI readings today (Chile has already surprised on the upside) and any further upside here will warn that rates need to stay higher for longer - damaging growth prospects further.
In the US today we will hear from Fed speakers Michelle Bowman and Loretta Mester later on. A 25bp Fed rate hike on 16 March is fully discounted as are five hikes by the end of the year. Tomorrow's US CPI release will help determine whether the Fed starts off with a 25bp move or 50bp in March.
US Dollar Index could stay offered in a 95.35-75 range today.
EUR: Schnabel And EC Forecasts In Focus
EUR/USD continues to trade in narrow ranges and noticeably has not been hit by European Central Bank doves, such as Banque de France governor François Villeroy, saying that markets have overreacted to last week's ECB press conference.
The focus today will be on how aggressively it revises up its 2023 CPI forecast and what that may mean for the crucial ECB inflation forecasts released on 10 March. Any substantial revision well above 2.0% could give the euro a little lift today.
The second event risk is the Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) Q&A from ECB's Isabel Schabel at 16CET today. She was one of the first of the ECB to publicly say that inflation risks were tilted to the upside. Similarly hawkish comments later today could help nudge EUR/USD back towards the 1.1460/80 area. EUR/USD should remain supported near 1.1400 today.
In addition to further tightening in Romania, there will also be a focus on central banks in Poland and Hungary today. National Bank of Poland Governor Adam Glapinski holds a press conference at 15CET today after yesterday's 50bp rate hike. Expect further hawkish remarks from him (we see rates being raised to 4.50% this year from 2.75% now). Also expect further support for a stronger zloty. And it is quite rare to see a central bank, in its monetary policy release, effectively calling for a stronger currency. EUR/PLN could have a run at 4.50 today.
Also look out for the minutes of the last National Bank of Hungary (NBH) rate meeting at 14CET today - possibly providing clues as to whether the NBH will take the one-week deposit rate (4.30%) even higher tomorrow.