Wednesday’s market was less a calm digestif and more a multi-course macro feast—some dishes overcooked, others under-seasoned, and by the end, everyone left a little uncomfortable. The dollar soared, yields climbed, and stocks gave up early gains as traders were force-fed a barrage of event risk: a punchy 3.0% U.S. GDP print, new tariffs from the White House, surprisingly upbeat euro zone growth, a rate hold from the Bank of Canada, and a hawkish-leaning Jerome Powell who made no promises of policy relief.
The Fed didn’t flinch. Despite two high-profile dissenters voting for a cut, Chair Powell held the line, casting the current stance as “modestly restrictive”—a coded phrase suggesting the Fed sees no urgency to pivot. That was a message markets hadn’t fully priced in. Rate cut bets for September were slashed, December is now the next viable window, and traders began whispering about a potential 50bp move to make up for lost time—if the data obliges.
Powell’s messaging was a bit more fiery than expected, hence so was the FX market’s reaction. The dollar surged nearly 1% to a two-month high, and the euro tumbled almost 3% this week, sinking to 1.1400—its sharpest drop in over three years. Crowded short-dollar trades were abruptly unwound, especially in G10 high-beta names. AUD, NZD, SEK—all declined over 1%. EUR/USD’s rally attempts may continue to be thwarted, and the pair now dashes with technical gaps. A full unwind could push us to 1.12 or even 1.11 before the dust settles.
The GDP data? Eye-catching, sure. A 3.0% annualized expansion in Q2 versus expectations of 2.4% is nothing to sneeze at. But scratch the surface, and the shine fades. The bulk of the strength came from a record bounce in net exports—a mirror image of Q1’s collapse—not from domestic demand. Private domestic final purchases, a far better proxy for underlying growth, barely moved. In short: impressive optics, soft core.
Meanwhile, Powell’s insistence on being “data dependent” rang with a familiar tone—measured, deliberate, and deliberately vague. Inflation is still above target, tariffs loom large, and the labour market, while softening, remains solid. If there’s going to be easing this year, Powell wants inflation prints to behave, unemployment to tick higher, and wage growth to stay tame. Until then, the market is on its own.
Which brings us back to politics. Trump has been itching for rate cuts, and two of his loyal appointees—Waller and Bowman—answered the call. But Powell didn’t flinch. Instead, he lobbed a hawkish grenade straight toward 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, suggesting that not hiking could be interpreted as the Fed "looking through" tariff-induced inflation. That wasn’t just a shrug—it was a deliberate signal. And it puts Powell squarely back on a collision course with the White House, which is already weaponizing trade policy and watching the Fed like a sniper—scope fixed, finger poised—keeping Powell squarely in the crosshairs of a policy misstep.
Bond markets flinched. The yield curve bear-flattened, with two-year yields up 7bp—classic dollar-positive price action. The dollar, in turn, ripped higher for a fourth straight day—its longest streak since February. Short positioning, thin liquidity, and a souring risk tone all acted as accelerants.
Stocks weren’t spared initially. The S&P 500 gave up early gains and finished marginally in the red, while copper tanked after Trump carved out an exemption for a widely imported grade.
But after-hours earnings from Meta and Microsoft poured a bag of sugar into the mix, helping tech bulls keep the Index rally dream alive. Still, with August and September historically the worst months of the year for equities, seasonal headwinds are stiffening. Valuations are stretched. AI euphoria has bought time, but gravity still lurks beneath the surface.
Still, the market darlings—those big tech and "big talk" names driving index leadership—they’re playing a different game altogether. Higher-for-longer doesn’t rattle them the way it does rate-sensitive cyclicals or debt-heavy sectors. Why? Because they’re sitting on war chests of capital, generating massive free cash flows quarter after quarter. These firms aren’t reliant on borrowing to fund growth; they’re self-financing machines. If anything, higher yields can help them earn more on their cash piles. As long as earnings keep beating, margins stay fat, and the AI narrative keeps the dream alive, these names can ride out a restrictive Fed. For them, it's not about cheap credit—it's about durable revenue engines and the power of scale.
Looking ahead, and for interest rate clarity, it’s all about the data. Friday brings the June core PCE deflator and a closely watched jobs report. Powell made it clear—he wants to see confirmation. The Fed’s not driving blind, but they’ve dimmed the headlights and are letting the terrain do the talking. The 1 August tariff deadline looms, and the market is still trying to price how far and fast the Fed can realistically go.
A December cut still seems the most plausible entry point. Inflation could ebb as tariffs pass through, labour demand is cooling, and the housing market is shifting into disinflation mode. If the dam breaks, a 50bp move wouldn’t surprise. That’s exactly how they played it in 2024—wait until conviction is high, then go big.
In the meantime, the dollar correction has legs. It’s not just short covering—it’s a rethink of the easing cycle’s depth. The Fed isn’t on autopilot. If anything, Powell just reminded everyone that this policy plane still needs to fight some headwinds before it can descend.
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