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Dollar slumps, rate hikes in question as Fed limits SVB fallout

Published Mar 13, 2023 12:04AM ET
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By Ambar Warrick

Investing.com -- The dollar fell sharply against a basket of currencies on Monday as markets reassessed their outlook for future interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve, amid growing expectations that the central bank will reconsider its hawkish rhetoric in the face of a looming banking crisis. 

Traders were now pricing in a greater chance that the Fed will raise rates by 25 basis points bps when it meets next week, a sharp reversal in the 50 bps expectations being priced in earlier. The trend comes as the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (NASDAQ:SIVB) highlighted the deepening economic cracks caused by a sharp increase in interest rates over the past year.

The dollar weakened sharply against a basket of currencies, with the dollar index and dollar index futures down 0.7% and 0.8%, respectively. The two were trading at over two-week lows.

Short-term Treasury yields also plummeted from recent highs, while long-term yields firmed on the prospect of a potential pause in further interest rate hikes.  

The U.S. Treasury and the Fed had over the weekend announced emergency funding measures for the banking sector, after the sudden collapse and regulatory seizure of SVB last week. 

The White House also said it will ensure that depositors in the bank are made whole, and that SVB customers will have access to their deposits starting Monday. 

But markets now questioned the scope for further monetary tightening in the U.S., given that more rate hikes are likely to cause more economic damage.

Goldman Sachs analysts said that they no longer expect the Fed to hike rates this month, and expressed uncertainty over the path of monetary policy given the recent stress on the banking sector. 

Analysts at ING said that a 50 bps hike when the Fed meets on March 22 appeared unlikely, but said that a 25 bps raise was still on the cards. 

The Fed will convene for an emergency, closed-door meeting later on Monday, the results of which are expected to provide more insight on the central bank’s actions going forward.

Focus this week is also on consumer price index inflation data for February, after jobs data released last week showed some cooling in wage growth.

 
 
Dollar slumps, rate hikes in question as Fed limits SVB fallout
 

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Comments (10)
Mar 13, 2023 4:01AM ET
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We don't expect the US Govt to tolerate inflation, we still expect a rate hike from Fed
Mario Rossi
Mario Rossi Mar 13, 2023 2:29AM ET
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So no more fight to inflation? It can continue to grow?
dave westings
westings Mar 13, 2023 2:29AM ET
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am shure shareholders (of any stock) will scratch their heads right know. the FED makes depositors whole but that implies a restart and consent from shareholders.  this doesn't vote well for stock market in general.
chino Choi
chino Choi Mar 13, 2023 1:49AM ET
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buy bitcoin and get out of this ponzi scheme
Deborah Holloway
Deborah Holloway Mar 13, 2023 1:35AM ET
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You have to wonder why the Fed didn't see this coming.
Steve Bojo
Steve Bojo Mar 13, 2023 1:35AM ET
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They haven’t seen anything coming
William Smith
William Smith Mar 13, 2023 1:03AM ET
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So we will let inflation run wild to stop other poorly run banks from failing? Sounds like a road map to destruction.
Brad Albright
Brad Albright Mar 13, 2023 1:03AM ET
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Check your premise.
Dave Jones
Dave Jones Mar 13, 2023 12:48AM ET
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Financial meltdowns...the backbone of wall street!
dave westings
westings Mar 13, 2023 12:32AM ET
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rate hikes are toast again, the problem lies in the deposits, there are not enough account holders with a positive net saldo because for a long time credit was king, but now margins getting squeezed, banks all of a sudden need cashflow to keep the books running.  so this will be the decade for consumer savings again expect 5 to 10% and more on savings accounts like we had in the 80ties, while banks taper off the risks.
Rodger Wagner
Rodger Wagner Mar 13, 2023 12:20AM ET
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All the wishing in the workd won’t stop the Fed from the on going needed rates hikes.
mohamed sulibi
mohamed sulibi Mar 13, 2023 12:20AM ET
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we will see today at 8:00 am on 3/13/2023
Pea K
Pea K Mar 13, 2023 12:12AM ET
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The US financial system is swaddled in debt. No state or federal government can afford to pay 4% to 5% debt servicing. The fed will be back to 3% with 12 months
 
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