Home / Market Update / Commodities / Market Drivers – US Session – 10 February

Market Drivers – US Session – 10 February

Major pairs were quite volatile on Thursday following the release of US inflation figures. The US Consumer Price Index soared in January, higher than expected.

The headline spurred a short-lived dollar’s rally, although the greenback quickly changed course and moved from daily highs to fresh weekly lows against most of its major rivals.

Economic Data
The consumer price index, the most widely followed monthly indicator of inflation, rose 7.5% over the past year, hotter than the expected 7.3% gain. That is an acceleration from December’s 7% gain, and the highest level in 40 years. Month over month, consumer prices rose 0.6% in January, also higher than the expected 0.5% increase.

Meanwhile, last week’s initial jobless claims fell to 223,000 vs. the previous week’s 238,000 first-time unemployment claims, according to the Labour Department.

Other Developments
The EUR/USD pair peaked at 1.1394, a fresh 2022 high, stabilizing at the 1.1460 price zone. Earlier in the day, the European Commission raised its inflation expectations for this year from 3.5% but is still expecting it to decline in 2023, seeing it at 1.7%.

Prices pressure was blamed on supply disruption and the energy crisis, exacerbated by geopolitical tensions between Russia and Ukraine. Also, Bundesbank Governor Joachim Nagel indicated that the European Central Bank might raise rates later this year.

The GBP/USD pair holds on to intraday gains just above the 1.3600 region after hitting a monthly high of 1.3643.

Raising the European Central Bank’s main interest rate now would not bring down record-high Eurozone inflation and only hurt the economy, ECB President Christine Lagarde said in an interview published on Friday.

Commodity-linked currencies were unable to hold on to intraday gains. The AUD/USD pair is marginally higher at around 0.7180, while USD/CAD is up for the day, trading at around 1.2700.

RBA Governor Philip Lowe will testify at a virtual hearing before the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics and may refer to the monetary policy.

Crude oil prices ended the day little changed. The OPEC boosted its forecast for 2022 crude demand by 100K barrels per day but reported that output rose by 64K bpd in January, lagging the pledged increase by OPEC+. WTI trades at $89.60 a barrel. Gold jumped to $1,841.83 a troy ounce but retreated towards the current 1,830 region.

Wall Street edged lower, with the DJIA shedding over 500 points. The poor tone of equities helped the greenback to recover some ground ahead of the daily close.

US Treasury yields soared. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury note soared to 2.02%, above the 2% threshold for the first time since 2019, while the 2-year note yielded as much as 1.51%. Following the release of inflation data, the chances of a rate hike of 50 basis points in March rose to nearly 50%.

Also Read

ECB’s Lagarde: Hasty rate hike wouldn’t solve inflation problem

AUD/USD Pressured On RBA’s Lowe’s Comments

Earnings Still Catch Investors’ Attention

Oil Briefly Rises On Lower Inventories, OPEC’s Demand Forecast

NZD/USD Fades as USD Finds Solace on Hawkish Fed

Does Inflation Data Incite A New Forex Storm?

Gold Price Index Retreats As Bulls Defeated On Hawkish Fed

EUR/USD Reaches Fresh Highs

Fed Bullard Concerned About January’s CPI Data

BoE’s Bailey: EU insurance laws should be changed

Attacks Against BoE’s Bailey Over Pay Rises Miss Their Target

CPI Keeps The Door Open For A US 50bp Interest Hike in March

How Does CPI Data Influence Financial Markets?

Gold Price Rebounds Sharply As USD Tumbles

Biden: Things could get crazy rapidly in Ukraine

Check Also

Britain’s Economy Rebounds in Q1, But Long-Term Growth Woes Cloud Election Outlook

Key Points: Stronger Rebound: Britain’s GDP grew by 0.7% in Q1 2024, exceeding initial estimates, …