13/09/2025 Week Ahead
This week brings five G10 central bank meetings, with markets focusing primarily on the United States. The Federal Reserve is widely expected to deliver a 25 bp rate cut, though derivatives markets still see close to a 10% chance of a larger 50 bp move. The situation is complicated by political developments. On Monday, the Senate is expected to confirm President Trump’s nominee, Stephen Miran, as Fed governor, just hours before the FOMC meeting begins. Governor Waller has also suggested that further deterioration in the labor market could justify a deeper cut, raising the possibility of dissent within the committee. Such divisions risk adding to concerns over the Fed’s independence, already heightened by the Trump administration’s attempt to remove Governor Cook from her post. A legal ruling on that matter may come before markets open on Monday.
Global policymakers remain sensitive to these developments. Several foreign central bankers voiced concern at Jackson Hole about the political backdrop surrounding the Fed. Against this backdrop, the US and Canada are expected to ease policy this week, while the Bank of England and Bank of Japan are expected to hold rates steady.
Market positioning reflects a broader theme of crowded trades. The US dollar has been under sustained selling pressure, with gold benefiting from heavy demand. Yet these moves may be reaching exhaustion. The Dollar Index hit its low on July 1, the same day the euro and sterling reached multi-year highs. Meanwhile, the yen bottomed against the dollar back in April, highlighting divergences in timing. US yields continue to soften, with the 10-year dipping below 4.0% intraday last week for the first time since early April, and the 2-year yield reaching a five-month low near 3.46%. These dynamics suggest tactical caution is warranted, even if the broader trends remain intact.
The US dollar is moving in step with interest rate expectations, showing a strong inverse correlation with Fed funds futures. The current 30-day reading of around 0.65 highlights how sensitive the currency has become to monetary policy signals, one of the highest levels seen this year. Earlier in the spring, tariff headlines briefly reversed the correlation, underlining how policy and politics continue to shape dollar movements.
This week’s main focus is the Federal Reserve. Markets are pricing in a rate cut as inflationary pressures remain but confidence grows in the easing cycle. The Senate’s vote on Stephen Miran’s nomination as Fed governor adds uncertainty, with the possibility he pushes for a larger 50 bp cut. Updated economic projections will reflect how Fed officials view the path ahead, particularly given that several policymakers in June expected no cuts this year. Futures are already signaling much lower rates for the end of next year compared with official projections.
Alongside rates, discussions may begin on quantitative tightening. Bank reserves are shrinking and the use of the Fed’s reverse repo facility is falling, raising speculation that reserves are already close to the “minimum ample” level. Governor Waller has suggested a level near $2.7 trillion, though uncertainty means the Fed is likely to proceed cautiously. Upcoming corporate tax payments and quarter-end funding pressures could offer an early test of market resilience, though bond volatility remains low.
In price terms, the Dollar Index remains stuck in a wide range. It bottomed at 96.35 in July, peaked at 100.25 in August, and is now testing lows again near 97.25. Sentiment is heavily negative, but a break above resistance between 98.30 and 98.75 could trigger a sharp short squeeze.
The Australian dollar has shown significant sensitivity to global market drivers, with correlations highlighting its shifting dynamics. In early September, the 30-day inverse correlation with the Dollar Index reached extreme levels near -0.85, the strongest since early 2024, before easing back toward -0.75. A similar pattern is seen against the US dollar’s exchange rate with the Canadian dollar. Meanwhile, the correlation with gold has weakened, dropping below 0.40 for the first time since late July.
The Australian dollar is also increasingly responsive to US rates. The 30-day inverse correlation with the US two-year yield stands near -0.57, close to its most extreme in over a year, while the correlation with the two-year differential has moderated to around 0.30, well below January’s high of 0.65. In contrast, the link with Australia’s own two-year yield is muted at under 0.10, suggesting domestic rates play a smaller role in current price action.
On the domestic front, labour market data due this week will be closely watched. While the Reserve Bank of Australia is not expected to cut rates at its upcoming meeting unless employment data shows significant deterioration, job creation has slowed this year compared with 2024. The unemployment rate remains steady at 4.2%, and participation is holding at 67%, near recent highs.
The Canadian dollar is displaying its usual pattern of tracking closely with the broader movement of the US dollar. Historically, it performs better when the US dollar is firm and tends to underperform when the US dollar softens. This trend remains intact, with the rolling 30-day correlation between the two currencies slightly below 0.70. Late August saw the correlation peak near 0.80, the strongest level in more than a year.
This week brings key domestic data and a central bank decision. Inflation remains subdued, with headline CPI holding between 1.7% and 1.9% year-over-year for four consecutive months, though base effects from last year’s declines suggest some upside risk. Core inflation remains slightly above 3%, keeping price pressures elevated even as economic growth weakens. Canada reported a sharper-than-expected contraction in Q2 and soft employment figures for August, adding pressure on the Bank of Canada. Markets are pricing in a high probability of a rate cut at this week’s meeting, which will be closely watched given its proximity to the US Federal Reserve decision.
China continues to carefully manage the yuan, maintaining a policy of stability against the US dollar. The offshore yuan shows a modest correlation with broader global moves, tracking positively with the dollar-yen pair and the Dollar Index, while showing a weaker, inverse relationship with the euro. This reflects Beijing’s strategy of anchoring the currency while still allowing some market-driven adjustments.
Attention this week turns to a series of important domestic indicators. Fixed asset investment is expected to have slowed further in August, extending a downtrend that began in April, with the July pace already the weakest since the pandemic. Real sector activity, including retail sales and industrial production, is forecast to improve slightly on a year-over-year basis, though property market weakness persists. Home prices are expected to continue falling, with investment still failing to recover in the sector.
In markets, the yuan strengthened to its best level of the year near CNH7.1130 before easing back toward CNH7.1250. A sustained move above CNH7.15 would mark a significant technical shift. Equity market gains and speculation that the PBOC could expand bond purchases in Q4 may support renewed foreign interest. At the same time, the PBOC has been guiding the daily dollar fix lower, though keeping it above CNY7.10. A decisive break below this level would likely fuel expectations of further yuan appreciation toward CNY7.00.
The euro’s behavior remains closely linked to movements in short-term yields, particularly in relation to the US. At present, the 30-day rolling correlation between changes in the euro and Germany’s two-year yield is inverse at around -0.35. This is a shift from the positive correlation that prevailed from late 2024 through mid-2025. More notably, the euro shows a strong inverse correlation of -0.77 with the US two-year yield, underscoring the dominant influence of US rates on the single currency. The euro also maintains an inverse correlation of around -0.60 with the US-Germany two-year yield spread, highlighting the persistent rate differential as a key driver.
In the credit space, Fitch downgraded France to A+ from AA- with a stable outlook, largely expected by markets. At the same time, Portugal was upgraded to A from A-, and S&P lifted Spain’s rating to A+ from A, reflecting improved external balances and private sector deleveraging. Despite these adjustments, yield spreads remain relatively contained, with France’s 10-year yield just 22 bp above Spain, 38 bp higher than Portugal, and slightly below Italy’s.
From a growth perspective, Eurozone data releases for July add little fresh insight, as most national figures were already known. Industrial production data showed uneven results: Germany rose 1.3%, Italy 0.4%, France fell 1.1%, and Spain slipped 0.5%. The bloc’s Q3 growth is expected to remain subdued at around 0.1%, in line with Q2.
The yen remains closely tied to movements in US interest rates, with correlations highlighting the strength of this relationship. Over the past 30 sessions, the yen’s exchange rate has shown a stronger correlation with the US two-year yield (0.83) than with the 10-year yield (0.77). The correlations with yield differentials also remain significant, with the US-Japanese two-year spread at 0.63 and the 10-year spread slightly above 0.65. Both reached two-year highs earlier this month near 0.85, underscoring the yen’s heavy dependence on external rate dynamics rather than domestic conditions.
On the domestic side, Japan’s economy shows modest but uneven growth across sectors. The tertiary sector expanded by an average of 0.4% in the first half of 2025, compared with 0.3% growth in industrial output. This week’s releases will provide updates on both activity and inflation trends. The Tokyo CPI already indicated that nationwide inflation slowed in August, with headline and core measures likely slipping below 3% for the first time since late 2024. This would mark the fourth straight decline in headline inflation and the third in the core measure. The Bank of Japan meets after the CPI release, with no rate change expected, though market participants will scrutinize Governor Ueda’s comments for future guidance.
Sterling remains highly sensitive to the broader direction of the US dollar, with strong correlations showing how external drivers dominate. The 30-day inverse correlation between sterling and the Dollar Index is currently near -0.80, a level consistent with recent trends but still below the extreme readings of 2023 and 2024. Sterling also tracks closely with the euro, with the correlation near 0.84. Sensitivity to rate dynamics is notable, with the exchange rate inversely correlated with the US two-year yield at -0.57, compared with -0.32 for the UK two-year Gilt. The inverse correlation with the two-year rate differential stands at -0.52, further reinforcing the role of cross-market rate moves.
The coming week is one of the most important for UK markets, with jobs, inflation, retail sales, and the Bank of England’s policy decision all on the calendar. Labour market data continues to show signs of weakening, as companies cut jobs at the fastest pace in four years. Inflation may ease slightly but will remain elevated, keeping the BOE cautious. Unlike the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate, the BOE’s focus on price stability has encouraged officials to delay rate cuts. Market pricing does not anticipate the next rate cut until April 2026. Retail sales data, due after the BOE meeting, will provide further insight into consumer resilience after recent quarterly weakness.
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