“Trump’s nomination will amp up the pressure to the point where we could have a shadow Fed chair before Powell steps down in May next year,” said Rodrigo Catril, a strategist at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Sydney. “We think it’s fair to suggest that the pressure on Powell to cut rates will increase, and that’s adding to selling pressure on the dollar.”
The latest headlines on Powell add another element of risk to the dollar and US Treasuries, which are both already under pressure from uncertainties around the impact of tariffs and a ballooning fiscal deficit.Bloomberg’s dollar gauge fell as much as 0.2% to the lowest since April 2022. The gauge has now dropped more than 8% this year. Traders have boosted bets on Fed rate cuts this year in recent days, and are now pricing in 66 basis points of easing by year-end versus 51 basis points at the end of last week, based on overnight-indexed swaps.
“This is definitely weighing on the bigger dollar,” said Ignatius Pang, head of foreign-exchange sales and execution for Asia at Union Bancaire Privee. Episodes of US currency strength are “opportunities to actually look at diversifying” dollar holding, he said.
Potential replacements for Powell include Fed governor Kevin Warsh and National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.What Bloomberg Strategists Say
“Investors will read the prospect of President Trump naming a new Federal Reserve chair by October as a signal that early interest-rate cuts are more likely. Traders are pricing for a Fed rate cut in September, but this potential twist raises the stakes for July to be taken seriously for a 25-bp reduction.”
Mark Cranfield, Markets Live strategist
Trump said on Wednesday he had three or four people in mind to succeed Powell, whose term as chair ends in May 2026. The president has lashed out at the Fed’s position to keep rates on hold, arguing for cuts and saying the central bank is keeping borrowing costs for the US government high.
“It does effectively make Powell less influential as everyone moves their attention to the incoming Chair,” said Matthew Haupt, a portfolio manager at Wilson Asset Management in Sydney. “So it’s a dovish tilt.”
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