![12.16 钱](https://www.traderknows.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=1920,quality=75,format=auto/https://prod-asset-ch3awt.traderknows.com/images/1f79540f036641c08cf216f615ded7d6.width-800.png)
Dollar Index Surges Above 107 as Diverging Monetary Policies Drive Markets
Last week, the dollar performed strongly, with the index rising above 107, mainly driven by expectations of diverging global monetary policies. The Federal Reserve maintained a relatively hawkish stance amidst gradual interest rate cuts, while many other central banks adopted more accommodative policies, further strengthening the dollar.
The Swiss National Bank and the Bank of Canada both cut rates by 50 basis points last week, while the European Central Bank reduced rates by 25 basis points but remained broadly dovish. Meanwhile, expectations for a rate hike by the Bank of Japan significantly weakened, and China is likely to implement moderately accommodative monetary policy for the first time in over a decade. These combined factors caused widespread declines in non-U.S. currencies, reinforcing the dollar's strong position.
Non-U.S. Currencies Come Under Pressure, Yen Leads Declines
Last week, except for the Norwegian krone, which rose slightly by 0.1% supported by rising oil prices, all other major non-U.S. currencies fell:
- Australian Dollar: Although the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) left rates unchanged, a dovish statement heightened expectations for a rate cut at the next meeting, leading the Australian dollar to fall by 0.45%.
- Canadian Dollar: The Bank of Canada (BOC) made a widely expected significant rate cut of 50 basis points, causing the Canadian dollar to decline by 0.54%.
- Euro: The European Central Bank (ECB) cut rates by 25 basis points as expected, but the meeting was broadly dovish, leading to expectations of further rate cuts, and the euro fell by 0.63%.
- Pound: British economic data fell short of expectations, with the pound plummeting by 0.98%.
- Swiss Franc: The Swiss National Bank (SNB) unexpectedly cut rates by 50 basis points, causing the Swiss franc to drop by 1.56%.
- Yen: The Bank of Japan (BOJ) indicated it would not raise rates this week, coupled with rising U.S. Treasury yields, leading to a sharp decline of 2.38% for the yen, the steepest fall among G10 currencies.
Additionally, the Renminbi remained volatile at low levels last week against the backdrop of a strengthening dollar, reflecting ongoing market attention on the divergence in Chinese and U.S. monetary policies.
Market Focused on Three Major Central Bank Meetings This Week
In the final week before the Christmas holiday, the market's focus will be on the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England (BOE), and the Bank of Japan (BOJ) meetings, as well as the December PMI data for Europe and the U.S.
- Federal Reserve: The market has fully priced in a potential 25 basis points rate cut from the Fed this week. Attention will shift to the dot plot and Powell's press conference tone. Given the recent rise in inflation data, the dot plot may raise future rate expectations, indicating fewer rate cuts.
- Bank of England: The expectation for the BOE to leave rates unchanged is largely consistent, but recent weak UK economic data may lead the central bank to adopt a more dovish stance.
- Bank of Japan: Despite low expectations for a rate hike from the BOJ this time, the central bank may hint at a possible rate increase early next year, especially under the pressure of the yen's continued depreciation.
Dollar Bulls May Remain Strong Through Year-End
Overall, the dollar's upward momentum may moderate, but expectations of diverging monetary policies will continue to support the dollar's elevated level through year-end. The Fed's gradual rate cuts give it a policy advantage over other central banks, while non-U.S. currencies may continue their weak performance under the dominant influence of accommodative expectations.
Investors should pay close attention to the soon-to-be-released interest rate dot plot and statements from various central bank meetings, as these will have a crucial impact on the forex market's trajectory by year-end.
![商务合作 Skype ENG](https://www.traderknows.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=1920,quality=75,format=auto/https://prod-asset-ch3awt.traderknows.com/images/765cacf76a7a44a4a828129f5d15304e.width-800.png)
![商务合作 Telegram Eng](https://www.traderknows.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=1920,quality=75,format=auto/https://prod-asset-ch3awt.traderknows.com/images/ed6f90378f1c44dbaef015489edd2127.width-800.png)