- Federal Reserve rate decision: Rates held unchanged
- The full statement from the June 2023 rate decision
- FOMC dot plot and central tendencies from the June 2023 meeting. EOY 2023 rate 5.6%
- Powell opening statement: Since last year, we have significantly raised interest rates
- Powell Q&A: It seemed to make obvious sense to use to moderate pace of hikes
- US May PPI final demand 1.1% % versus 1.5% expected
- Nvidia trades to a new all-time high. AI euphoria continues.
- US weekly crude oil inventories +7919K vs -510K expected
- China has been holding 'urgent' meeting with business leaders on boosting growth
Markets:
- NZD leads, CAD lags
- Gold up $2 to $1945
- US 10-year yields down 3.9 bps to 3.79%
- WTI crude down 68-cents to $68.74
- S&P 500 up 6 points to 4377.
The Federal Reserve held rates as expected but still managed to deliver a surprise with the dot plot year-end level rising to 4.6%, above the 4.3% expected. The initial reaction was US dollar buying along with selling of risk assets and the front end of the bond market. The dollar rose 50-70 pips across the board on the spike in a move that erased the dollar selling in the run-up to the meeting.
Those levels held until the press conference but as Powell spoke traders sensed a lack of conviction on further rate hikes. He only went as far as to say the July meeting was 'live'. That helped to spark a retracement with the dollar giving back the majority of its gains. Pricing for July now only sits at 60%, which is little changed from pre-FOMC levels.
Treasury yields sent a similar signal with 2-years initially popping to 4.8% only to sag back to 4.7% in an indication that the market isn't convinced rates will stay above 5% for long.
Before the Fed decision, some medium term levels were breached as AUD/USD rose to the highest since February while the euro hit a one-month high and the pound rose to the best levels since April 2021.
Oil was also in focus as another big build in US supplies turned a rally into a slump. That spilled over into CAD and led to underperformance.