After a subdued print yesterday, the chances of today’s US exceeding the consensus 0.3% MoM are lower. We expect firmer conviction on three by year-end after today’s release and a weaker . In the eurozone, the ECB meeting should have little impact on FX, with only some minor EUR downside risks. Geopolitics remains sidelined
US Dollar: Expecting Core CPI at 0.3% MoM
FX volatility has picked up modestly since the start of the month, but remains well below spring and even early August levels. The rise in geopolitical risk in the Middle East (Israel’s strike in Qatar) and Europe (Russian drones downed in Poland) has failed to drive any sizeable FX reaction. It appears that markets are not seeing those events as likely to lead to escalations.
US data remain the most likely driver of any larger FX volatility shake-up at this stage. August data is released today, and we are aligned with the consensus in expecting a 0.3% MoM core print.
Yesterday, US came in notably subdued, falling -0.1% MoM for both headline and measures. July’s figures were also revised down by 0.2pp, now showing a 0.7% MoM increase versus the initially reported 0.9%. The key driver was a sharp -1.7% MoM drop in “trade services”– a proxy for corporate profit margins. This suggests that, for now, firms are absorbing higher input costs linked to tariffs rather than passing them on to consumers.
This could reflect caution around end-demand prospects or a strategic reluctance to raise prices and risk public or political backlash. Either way, it reinforces confidence that the upcoming print is unlikely to exceed 0.3% MoM, which in our view can help cement bets for three 25bp Fed cuts by year-end. Unless we see a major inflation undershoot today, speculation on a 50bp move next week should remain contained.
We believe the risks are skewed to the downside for the dollar today, as relatively benign CPI data could give the go-ahead to re-enter USD shorts that might have been partly held back ahead of the release.
ECB: Limited Risks from ECB Meeting
As mentioned above, markets are not showing much concern for the events in Poland. The Polish zloty is coming under some pressure this morning, but has lost a relatively modest 0.6% against the dollar and 0.4% vs EUR since the Russian drone news. Another European geopolitics benchmark – – has actually traded higher after some dovish comments by the Swiss National Bank yesterday.
Markets’ approach to the Ukraine-Russia situation has remained generally cautious but optimistic-leaning, as gains in high-beta European currencies accrued in August haven’t yet been pared despite lacklustre progress towards a ceasefire. The benefits to the euro itself have not been significant, and the downside risks from a moderate unwinding of optimism should not hugely hurt the euro either.
Today’s big event in the eurozone is the ECB meeting. As discussed in our preview, markets might be underestimating the doves’ opposition to the “good place” narrative pushed by President Christine Lagarde and the hawks. However, recent communication and the above consensus core CPI have made it increasingly likely that the ECB has already reached the end of its cutting cycle.
With political turmoil in France still on the front pages, markets may however, be reluctant to fully price out the residual 15bp of easing priced in for 2026 just yet. All in all, we expect a quiet meeting with contained FX impact potential. If anything, we could see some euro softening as any comments on French bonds might be read as dovish indications. For now, we are looking at a re-stabilisation in the 1.170-1.175 area in ahead of the weekend.
GBP: Firming Up
The has continued to firm up against the euro, as the narrative of dire debt servicing issues in the UK lost some steam. When looking at the infamous bonds, gilts have actually outperformed the rest of Europe since the start of the month, now yielding 25bp below the 3 September 5.74% peak.
The pound’s much higher sensitivity than EUR and USD to back-end bond selloffs means downside risks remain ahead of a possibly chaotic pre-Budget (26 November) period. But higher front-end rates led by a hawkish Bank of England continue to make the pound an expensive sell against the euro in periods of gilt stability.
The UK releases July’s data tomorrow morning, although that is not on top of the data points likely to steer the MPC’s views now. Next week, we’ll see the key jobs and inflation numbers for August. Until then, can remain gently offered.
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