By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) -TRADING DAY
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist
A dramatic day on Wednesday ended with Wall Street in the green and the dollar and short-dated Treasury yields lower, although off their earlier extremes, after President Donald Trump denied reports he will soon fire Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
More on that below. In my column today I look at Trump’s call for 300 basis points of Fed rate cuts and, although it is wishful thinking, why it shines a light on whether Fed policy is too tight, too loose, or maybe just about right.
If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.
1. Popping the dollar’s ‘anti-bubble?’: Mike Dolan 2. Central banks ramp up buying at euro zone bond sales 3. EU trade chief heads to Washington in search of tariffssolution 4. Beneath China’s resilient economy, a life of pay cutsand side hustles 5. Markets call Trump’s bluff on Russian oil sanctions inincreasingly risky game: Bousso
Today’s Key Market Moves
* U.S. Treasury yields fall across the curve, mostly at theshort end – 2-year yield falls 7 bps. * The 2s/10s U.S. curve steepens through 60 bps, its highestin nearly two months. It steepens for a fourth day, its longeststreak this year. * Wall Street rises, led by small caps – the Russell 2000gains 1%, clawing back half of the previous day’s losses. * The dollar index snaps a six-day winning streak and fallsaround 0.3%. * Gold rises 0.8% to $3,350/oz.
Trump-Powell drama sizzles, dollar fizzles
At around midday in the U.S. session on Wednesday, it looked like six months of verbal attacks on Fed Chair Jerome Powell from President Donald Trump for not cutting interest rates were about to reach boiling point – according to Bloomberg News, Powell would soon be fired.
The market reaction was what you might expect – the dollar, stocks, and short-dated Treasury yields fell, and the yield curve steepened. The most notable moves were in the dollar and two-year yield.
But Trump swiftly denied the report, insisting that although he had discussed ousting Powell with lawmakers, it was “highly unlikely” he would fire him. Markets recovered their poise, especially stocks, although the rebound in short-dated yields and the dollar was less pronounced.
Trump firing Powell would be a monumental event as no president has ever formally dismissed a Fed Chair. But it would come as little surprise. Trump’s desire for lower interest rates is ferocious, and he regularly berates Powell for not cutting them. Political interference in monetary policymaking? Yes, but Trump crossed that Rubicon some time ago.
By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) -TRADING DAY
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist
A dramatic day on Wednesday ended with Wall Street in the green and the dollar and short-dated Treasury yields lower, although off their earlier extremes, after President Donald Trump denied reports he will soon fire Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
More on that below. In my column today I look at Trump’s call for 300 basis points of Fed rate cuts and, although it is wishful thinking, why it shines a light on whether Fed policy is too tight, too loose, or maybe just about right.
If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.
1. Popping the dollar’s ‘anti-bubble?’: Mike Dolan 2. Central banks ramp up buying at euro zone bond sales 3. EU trade chief heads to Washington in search of tariffssolution 4. Beneath China’s resilient economy, a life of pay cutsand side hustles 5. Markets call Trump’s bluff on Russian oil sanctions inincreasingly risky game: Bousso
Today’s Key Market Moves
* U.S. Treasury yields fall across the curve, mostly at theshort end – 2-year yield falls 7 bps. * The 2s/10s U.S. curve steepens through 60 bps, its highestin nearly two months. It steepens for a fourth day, its longeststreak this year. * Wall Street rises, led by small caps – the Russell 2000gains 1%, clawing back half of the previous day’s losses. * The dollar index snaps a six-day winning streak and fallsaround 0.3%. * Gold rises 0.8% to $3,350/oz.
Trump-Powell drama sizzles, dollar fizzles
At around midday in the U.S. session on Wednesday, it looked like six months of verbal attacks on Fed Chair Jerome Powell from President Donald Trump for not cutting interest rates were about to reach boiling point – according to Bloomberg News, Powell would soon be fired.
The market reaction was what you might expect – the dollar, stocks, and short-dated Treasury yields fell, and the yield curve steepened. The most notable moves were in the dollar and two-year yield.
But Trump swiftly denied the report, insisting that although he had discussed ousting Powell with lawmakers, it was “highly unlikely” he would fire him. Markets recovered their poise, especially stocks, although the rebound in short-dated yields and the dollar was less pronounced.
Trump firing Powell would be a monumental event as no president has ever formally dismissed a Fed Chair. But it would come as little surprise. Trump’s desire for lower interest rates is ferocious, and he regularly berates Powell for not cutting them. Political interference in monetary policymaking? Yes, but Trump crossed that Rubicon some time ago.
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