DXY (US Dollar Index) Analysis for January 2024
The Dollar Index (DXY) ended 2023 with a predictable decline that saw the US currency lose more than 5% of its value in two months, breaking below 102.00p and hitting a 6-month low.
The dollar sagged after a sharp decline in US inflation convinced the Federal Reserve (Fed) to reverse its tight monetary policy, which has seen the key interest rate rise to 5.5% over the past year. November's U.S. consumer price index data showed that the inflation rate fell to 3.1%, the lowest in a year and a half. However, the core CPI, which excludes food and energy prices, remains at 4%.
Analysts foresee a further decline in core inflation in the near future. An obvious downtrend is also seen in industrial inflation, which fell from 1.2% to 0.9% in November, while the core producer price index adjusted from 2.3% to 2%. Experts from Citi forecast that in the first quarter of 2024, a further easing of inflationary pressures will contribute to lower consumer activity and renewed selling in the hydrocarbon market, driven by fears of weak global economic growth prospects. Citi expects U.S. inflation to continue to move toward the 2% target, even without additional steps by the Fed to tighten monetary policy.
In response to easing inflationary pressures, the Fed at its December meeting left the key rate unchanged at 5.5%, recognizing that it had reached the restrictive level necessary for a gradual decline in inflation. Thus, the regulator's management confirmed that there was no need for further rate hikes, which had been considered as a baseline scenario back in November. The updated forecasts show that the interest rate could fall to 4.6% in 2024, which implies at least three rate cuts, followed by four more in 2025 and three in 2026.
At the press conference, Jerome Powell confirmed that officials have started discussing the timing of easing financial conditions, which further undermined the dollar's position in forex currency trading. Market participants believe that the first rate cut could come in March. According to the FedWatch Tool, the probability of such a scenario is now estimated at 78% and continues to grow as additional signals confirming the negative impact of high interest rates on the national economy emerge. For example, the latest U.S. industrial activity reports indicate that the economy has been stagnating for the past three months. The PMI index of the manufacturing sector in December decreased from 49.4 to 48.2. In case of deterioration of economic conditions in the U.S. in early 2024, traders will be convinced of the inevitability of the Fed's interest rate cut. Against this backdrop, the dollar is expecting a prolonged decline, the beginning of which we saw back in late 2023.
Our DXY position
- Sell Stop 100.50
- Take-Profit 90.00
- Stop-Loss 104.00