The US Dollar (USD) remains under pressure as soft labor data and speculation about a more dovish Fed tilt weigh on sentiment, even as OIS markets resist pricing deeper cuts. With the Dollar Index (DXY) breaking below 99.0 and long-end yields steepening on policy-credibility concerns, technical and seasonal forces now point toward further USD downside, Scotiabank's Chief FX Strategists Shaun Osborne and Eric Theoret report.
"The US Dollar (USD) is mixed this morning but retains a softer undertone overall. Weak US employment data are dovetailing with market concerns that a Hassett-led Fed could bring a new, more dovish policy perspective in the coming year. As yet, OIS are loathe to price in faster or deeper cuts and the terminal rate is being held at or around 3% through late 2026."
"But as Hassett’s chances of being nominated (reflected in Polymarket betting peaks) have improved in the past few weeks, the US yield curve has nudged a little steeper which could be a sign of concern about policy credibility in the longer run. That is not helpful for USD sentiment. "
"Net losses for the DXY so far today maintain the break in the index under the 99.0 technical support point, targeting losses to the mid-97 zone. Weekly price action is shaping up to 'confirm' the turn lower in the DXY from a technical point of view. Dollar seasonals are generally—but quite reliably—bearish in December."