Dollar slides as Powell rules out rate hikes

Fed appears less hawkish than expected - Dollar and Treasury yields pull back - Yen rallies on another round of suspected intervention - Wall Street trades cautiously ahead of NFPs
XM Group | 429 days ago

Fed is still leaning towards rate cuts

The US dollar slipped against all its major counterparts yesterday, losing the most ground against the Japanese yen, with dollar/yen closing the day slightly more than 2% down.

Responsible for the dollar’s retreat was the Fed. The Committee decided to keep interest rates unchanged as was widely expected and, although officials expressed concerns about the lack of progress towards their inflation objective, the forward guidance was not changed.

At the press conference, when asked about the possibility of resuming rate hikes, Chair Powell clearly said that it is unlikely that the next move will be a hike, adding that policy is well positioned to address different paths the economy might take, among which there are paths that warrant rate cuts.

Combined with the announcement to slow the speed of balance sheet drawdown by more than expected, this may have disappointed those expecting a more hawkish outcome, leading the market to believe that the Fed is still leaning towards cutting interest rates at some point this year. Indeed, alongside the US dollar, Treasury yields also pulled back, while according to Fed funds futures, investors are now penciling in 35bps worth of cuts from around 30 ahead of the meeting.

Did Japanese authorities intervene again?

A couple of hours after the Fed decision, the yen skyrocketed, with dollar/yen dropping to 153.00 from around 157.55, prompting traders to suspect another round of intervention by Japanese authorities.

Although Japan’s vice finance minister Kanda refrained from commenting on whether they have indeed stepped into the market when he was asked, this appears to be the second attempt this week to prop up the yen, with the first taking place on Monday after the yen slipped past the 160 per dollar level.

Having said all that, the yen is pulling back again today, remaining more than 10% down against the dollar this year, driven by diminishing Fed rate cut bets and by a BoJ that’s been constantly disappointing hawkish expectations.

Just on Friday, the Bank refrained from providing clear signals on whether another rate hike may be warranted soon, disappointing those expecting a summer action. Thus, for a yen recovery to be sustained, intervention on its own may not be enough. The BoJ might need to change the tone of its language as well.

Dow Jones gains, S&P 500 and Nasdaq finish in the red

On Wall Street, all three major indices gained after the Fed decision allowed investors to maintain hopes that borrowing costs will be eventually lowered. However, only the Dow Jones secured some gains, with both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq closing the session in the red.

Perhaps investors remained cautious ahead of Friday’s nonfarm payrolls as another strong report could convince the Fed to wait even longer before it starts examining whether and when interest rates need to be cut.

Another reason why investors are not so excited to increase their risk exposures may be the disappointing results by firms relating to artificial intelligence. The stock of Super Micro Computer (SMCI), one of the vendors that build Nvidia-based servers, tumbled after the firm’s revenue miss, while Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) announced disappointing chip sales forecasts, with its stock falling as well.

Regulation: CySEC (Cyprus), FSC (Belize), DFSA (UAE), FSCA (South Africa)
read more
Why Silver could be the precious metal of 2025

Why Silver could be the precious metal of 2025

The gold bar is metallic yellow and slightly behind the silver bar, which is metallic white and positioned in front. Gold may still be the headline act, but silver’s no longer content playing second fiddle. In 2025, silver isn’t just glittering - it’s surging forward as one of the most exciting metals on the market.
Deriv | 1 day ago
Risk-on sentiment fades as tariffs return to the spotlight 

Risk-on sentiment fades as tariffs return to the spotlight 

Dollar surrenders gains posted after robust labour market report; Trump celebrates US budget bill approval; scheduled to sign it today; Most Fed members feel more comfortable as July rate cut is priced out; Oil steadies near $66, gold rally retains momentum;
XM Group | 1 day ago
ATFX Market Outlook 4th July 2025

ATFX Market Outlook 4th July 2025

The U.S. economy added 147,000 jobs in June, beating expectations of 110,000, while the unemployment rate fell to 4.1%. Traders are now betting that the Fed is unlikely to cut rates before September. Meanwhile, the House narrowly passed Trump's major fiscal bill by a vote of 218 to 214. U.S. stocks rallied on Thursday, hitting fresh record highs.
ATFX | 2 days ago
Nonfarm payrolls take center stage

Nonfarm payrolls take center stage

Slide in US private payrolls raise concerns about NFP miss - US strikes trade deal with Vietnam ahead of July 9 deadline - Pound feels the heat of fiscal shenanigans - S&P 500 hits fresh record high ahead of jobs report
XM Group | 2 days ago
Rate Shifts Steer FX Markets as Silver Holds Strong

Rate Shifts Steer FX Markets as Silver Holds Strong

On July 3, silver stays firm above $35.40 as Fed cut bets persist. EUR/USD holds near 1.1800, while GBP/USD lingers near 1.3585 ahead of UK jobs data. JPY strengthens after BoJ signals a hawkish pause. AUD/USD slips on weak trade surplus. Focus turns to US NFP and ISM data for market direction before the US holiday break.
Moneta Markets | 3 days ago