The dollar gained against most major currencies on Wednesday, with a mild recovery of 0.26% seen in the dollar index (USDX) which is hovering close to the 103.0 mark. While markets have shown signs of resilience, underlying concerns about a U.S. recession are continuing to dampen sentiment and weigh on the dollar. Investors are closely watching for clues about the Federal Reserve's policy direction.
U.S. Treasury yields climbed on Wednesday after a lackluster auction of $42 billion in 10-year notes. The notes sold at a higher-than-expected yield of 3.960% due to weak demand, pushing benchmark 10-year yields up 6 basis points to 3.951%.
CME FedWatch data strongly indicates a 50 basis point Federal Reserve rate cut in September, with an 70.5% probability. The market also expects another rate cut in November, with a 54.7% chance.
The Japan 225 is seen moving higher early on Thursday, sustaining the gains seen in the previous session. After a sharp decline earlier this week, the index recovered much of its losses after attempts from some BOJ officials to temper expectations of aggressive rate hikes. However, the release of the BOJ's policy meeting summary dashed these hopes, as policymakers indicated a need for further rate increases to reach a neutral stance.
Energy markets gained on Wednesday, with the two main benchmarks WTI and Brent surging by 3.65% and 3.21% respectively supported by escalating geopolitical risks in the Middle East and a significant drawdown in U.S. crude stocks.
Wall Street posted another negative session on Wednesday, with all three major indices closing in the red as the risk of a bear market still remains if the economic slowdown becomes a recession. The technology sector took another hit by Super Micro Computer after the data center operator's June quarter earnings missed estimates, raising more concerns over just how much demand the artificial intelligence industry was generating.
For the week ahead market participants will be scrutinizing Federal Reserve commentary as expectations for substantial interest rate cuts mount. Some price action could be observed upon the release of unemployment claims and a 30-year bond auction later today.