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USD/CAD notched up a slightly lower low in the current down cycle yesterday and while the CAD is a little softer this morning, it is still bucking its usual trend of seasonal ambivalence in December, Scotiabank’s Chief FX Strategists Shaun Osborne and Eric Theoret report.
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Funny how none of the Fed candidates are talking about the one-off drop in oil prices
Fed Chair candidates are falling over themselves to explain how inflation really isn’t 2.8% y/y, as it was in the most-recent PCE report. They’re stripping out rent and portfolio management fees and tariffs to say that inflation is basically on target.
“Tariffs are not a source of persistent inflation,” candidate Chris Waller said today.
This is clearly an attempt to make the appropriate dovish talking points to please Trump. Now whether that charade continues after they actually get the job is anyone’s guess but time will tell.
Of course, the one-off factors swing both ways and that’s something they’re completely ignoring. WTI crude oil is down 23% year-to-date. That’s a big drag on inflation that will continue for a while as lower crude prices filter through.
But it won’t continue forever. If you’re watching oil company budgets this month, they’re being trimmed. No one is making money at $55 WTI and that’s going to do what low oil prices always do — cure low prices. Global oil demand continues to rise and the OPEC excess production will be trimmed and oil prices will inevitably rise again.
Of course, when crude prices do go up again, the same trio of Fed candidates will be ultra-quick to exclude energy costs in the PCE calculation. That won’t be a good look.
Ultimately though, the scorecard is what happens on inflation. We’ve just gone through a period of high prices that were a reminder to everyone of the costs. They were extremely disruptive and led to the topping of virtually every elected Western government; it also eroded faith in money and central banks. Still, it’s largely seen as a pandemic one-off. A repeat would be exponentially-more damaging and would risk unmooring inflation expectations for a generation.
In addition, there are other bubbles that are being formed by inflation that will take many years to unwind.
The Fed is traditionally the thought-leader of global central banks but it’s not clear there are enough people left to fight off inflation. We are also dealing with the breakdown of the global trading system and disruption of AI. How that impacts jobs, inflation and the economy is hard to predict but one thing that everyone in the economy should be able to rely on is sound money.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
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Funny how none of the Fed candidates are talking about the one-off drop in oil prices
Fed Chair candidates are falling over themselves to explain how inflation really isn’t 2.8% y/y, as it was in the most-recent PCE report. They’re stripping out rent and portfolio management fees and tariffs to say that inflation is basically on target.
“Tariffs are not a source of persistent inflation,” candidate Chris Waller said today.
This is clearly an attempt to make the appropriate dovish talking points to please Trump. Now whether that charade continues after they actually get the job is anyone’s guess but time will tell.
Of course, the one-off factors swing both ways and that’s something they’re completely ignoring. WTI crude oil is down 23% year-to-date. That’s a big drag on inflation that will continue for a while as lower crude prices filter through.
But it won’t continue forever. If you’re watching oil company budgets this month, they’re being trimmed. No one is making money at $55 WTI and that’s going to do what low oil prices always do — cure low prices. Global oil demand continues to rise and the OPEC excess production will be trimmed and oil prices will inevitably rise again.
Of course, when crude prices do go up again, the same trio of Fed candidates will be ultra-quick to exclude energy costs in the PCE calculation. That won’t be a good look.
Ultimately though, the scorecard is what happens on inflation. We’ve just gone through a period of high prices that were a reminder to everyone of the costs. They were extremely disruptive and led to the topping of virtually every elected Western government; it also eroded faith in money and central banks. Still, it’s largely seen as a pandemic one-off. A repeat would be exponentially-more damaging and would risk unmooring inflation expectations for a generation.
In addition, there are other bubbles that are being formed by inflation that will take many years to unwind.
The Fed is traditionally the thought-leader of global central banks but it’s not clear there are enough people left to fight off inflation. We are also dealing with the breakdown of the global trading system and disruption of AI. How that impacts jobs, inflation and the economy is hard to predict but one thing that everyone in the economy should be able to rely on is sound money.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
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We’re buying more of this beaten-up stock that an analyst just upgraded
The stock is one of seven out-of-favor names Jim Cramer highlighted at our recent Monthly Meeting. -
Gold trades with a positive bias as dovish Fed outlook offsets firmer US Dollar
Gold (XAU/USD) rebounds on Wednesday after early losses, though a firmer US Dollar (USD) continues to cap upside momentum. At the time of writing, XAU/USD is trading around $4,335, up nearly 0.70% on the day. -
USD firms on holiday positioning and Venezuela Oil blockade – Scotiabank
The US Dollar (USD) gained amid holiday positioning and a Trump-imposed Venezuelan oil blockade, though slowing labor market trends suggest the Fed could ease more aggressively in 2026. -
Fed’s Waller: There is no rush to cut interest rates given outlook
Federal Reserve (Fed) Governor Christopher Waller said on Wednesday that the Fed is not in a rush to cut interest rates, given the current outlook, per Reuters. -
Canada Foreign Portfolio Investment in Canadian Securities registered at $46.62B above expectations ($21.84B) in October
Canada Foreign Portfolio Investment in Canadian Securities registered at $46.62B above expectations ($21.84B) in October -
Canada Canadian Portfolio Investment in Foreign Securities dipped from previous $22.12B to $-11.58B in October
Canada Canadian Portfolio Investment in Foreign Securities dipped from previous $22.12B to $-11.58B in October -
Fed’s Waller: Jobs market is very soft, current payrolls growth not good
Waller has taken a really bearish turn on the economy. The other Fed candidates are arguing for rate cuts based on productivity but he’s arguing for them based on a poor economy.
- 2026 could turn out to be a better year for economy, hopes that helps job market
- Inflation is above target but should come down over next few months
- Inflation expectations are anchored
- Fed can go at a moderate pace, doesn’t need dramatic action
- Job market says Fed should continue to cut rates
- Fed is 50-100 bps above neutral
- Hart to say tariffs caused job market weakness
- Inflation is under control and the Fed will keep it under control
- Doesn’t see much downside risks for tariffs
Waller met with Trump this week for the Fed job. This probably isn’t what the President wanted to hear.
Maybe he will get the job but in all likelihood, Waller will look back on this as an episode that destroyed his reputation and credibility for nothing.
This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
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