U.S. CPI Cools for the Second Month in a Row: Yields & DXY Lower, S&P 500 Rises

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US CPI Inflation Rises Slower than Expected for Headline and Core Measures:

Headline CPI

MoM: 0.1% (Forecast 0.3%, Previous 0.4%)

YoY: 7.1% (Forecast 7.3%, Previous 7.7%)

Core CPI:

MoM: 0.2% (Forecast 0.3%, Previous 0.3%)

YoY: 6.0% (Forecast 6.1%, Previous 6.3%)

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US Dollar Index (DXY)

The dollar index dropped over 1% in the moments following the encouraging CPI data. The dollar therefore, continues its selloff with renewed momentum after the prior cooler CPI print for October

US 2 Year Treasury Yield

The 2 year US Treasury yield dipped as traders revise their stance on the path of future rate hikes lower. Already, the probability of a 25 basis point hike after tomorrows anticipated 50 bps hike is gaining traction and markets revise their estimation of the terminal rate closer to 4.8% via implied probabilities on Fed funds futures.

Just How Impactful Have Inflation Prints Been on Financial Markets?

The S&P 500 E-Mini Futures chart shows how influential inflation prints have been in determining not only market direction but also subsequent momentum. On the 13th of September when markets had anticipated a softer CPI print for August, we witnessed an immediate drop (-16% in total) when the 0.2% upside surprise materialized. Then on the 10th of November, the October CPI data produced the cooler inflation print which bolstered riskier markets in the anticipation that the Fed may be forced to tighten less hastily as inflation shows signs of slowing. The index rose nearly 10% off the back of the softer CPI print.

S&P 500 E-Mini Futures Daily Chart

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Source: TradingView, prepared by Richard Snow

As one would expect, the dollar too witnessed significant moves on the back of recent inflation prints (CPI and the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation ‘PCE’). As expected, the hotter than expected print in September drove the dollar with renewed vigor as markets priced in further aggressive rate hikes. The most recent October CPI print of 7.7% has set the tone for the latest dollar selloff ahead of the CPI data.

US Dollar Index (DXY) Daily Chart

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Source: TradingView, prepared by Richard Snow

— Written by Richard Snow for DailyFX.com

Contact and follow Richard on Twitter: @RichardSnowFX



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