Dollar falls despite strong US GDP report

Dollar falls despite strong US GDP report
Dollar falls despite strong US GDP report

The Dollar Index (DXY00) is down -0.22% as underlying dollar bearish sentiment outweighed today’s better-than-expected US GDP report and lower chances of the Federal Reserve easing monetary policy. Markets have today reduced the odds of a -25bp rate cut from 20% to 13% at the next FOMC meeting on January 27-28.

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

The dollar is also under pressure as the Federal Reserve increases liquidity in the financial system, having started buying $40 billion a month in Treasury bills in mid-December. The dollar is also being weakened by concerns that President Trump intends to appoint a dovish Federal Reserve chair, which would be bearish for the dollar. Trump recently said he will announce his choice for the new Federal Reserve chair in early 2026. Bloomberg reported that National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett is the most likely choice as the next Federal Reserve chair, seen by markets as the most moderate candidate.

US Q3 real GDP rose +4.3% (QoQ annualized), stronger than expectations of +3.3% and Q2 rate of +2.5%. The third quarter GDP price index rose +3.8% (quarter-on-quarter annualized), much stronger than expectations of +2.7% and up from +2.1% in the second quarter. The core PCE price index for the third quarter increased +2.9% (annualized quarter-on-quarter), in line with expectations, but above the +2.6% in the second quarter.

The Conference Board’s US Consumer Confidence Index for December fell -3.8 points to 89.1 from November’s revised level of 92.9 (88.7 preliminary), weaker than expectations for a 91.0 report.

The Philadelphia Fed Non-Manufacturing Index for December fell -0.5 points to -16.8 from -16.3 in November, which was weaker than expectations for an increase to -15.0.

October Durable Goods Orders fell -2.2% MoM, below expectations of -1.5%. October Durable Goods Orders excluding transportation rose +0.2% MoM, slightly below market expectations of +0.3%. October core capital goods orders (excluding transportation and defense), a proxy for capital spending, rose +0.5% mom, slightly stronger than market expectations of +0.3%.

November US industrial production fell -0.1% mom, slightly below market expectations of +0.1%. November manufacturing production fell -0.4% mom, below market expectations of +0.1%.

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