Investors are ditching U.S. dollar holdings at the fastest pace seen in a year as they position for an end to the Federal Reserve’s rate hike cycle and look ahead to possible rate cuts in the first few months of 2024.
The dollar index (DXY) has lost nearly 3% since the start of November, putting the measure — which tracks the performance of the dollar against a basket of rival currencies — on course for its worst month in more than a year.
In the same period of time, the Invesco DB USD Index Bearish ETF (NYSE:UDN), which tracks bearish sentiment on the dollar, has gained 2.8%, while the Invesco DB USD Index Bullish Fund ETF (NYSE:UUP), tracking bullish sentiment, has fallen 2.3%.
Asset Managers Selling Dollar Positions
According to data from State Street, published on Friday in the Financial Times, asset managers are on track to sell 1.6% of their open dollar positions this month, the largest monthly outflow since November 2022.
The bank added that asset managers had sold “significant” dollar holdings each day since the Nov. 3 payrolls report that showed unexpectedly weak jobs growth.
Also Read: Foreign Buyers Desert US Treasury Bond Market As Supply Increases
State Street’s data is not the first evidence that dollar assets are being sold. Recent Treasury Department data showed foreign investors were net sellers of U.S. government bonds (Treasuries) in September to the tune of $1.7 billion. This was the first time foreign investors were net sellers in more than two years.
The iShares iBonds Dec 2033 Term Treasury ETF (NASDAQ:IBTO), which tracks the performance of the 10-year Treasury, was down 1.9% in morning trade on Friday.
Fed Rate Hike Cycle At An End?
Pressure on dollar assets is coming from rising expectations that the Federal Reserve’s cycle of interest rate increases to tackle inflation is at an end. The Fed made its last rate hike in July setting the Fed Funds rate at between 5.25% and 5.5%, and has held the rate there at two subsequent meetings.
Earlier this month inflation data showed that consumer prices were dropping faster than the market expected. On this day alone, the dollar index dropped 1.5%. Furthermore, economists now believe a downturn in growth is on the way as job growth slows and post-pandemic demand fades.
“The U.S. data are likely to confirm a…
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