The global banks maintains its bearish USD outlook and updates its trade recommendations below.
J.P. Morgan: "Range breaks in the offing for the dollar
Outlook: The threat of early summer doldrums in FX has been dispelled by a mix of market moving data, tariff threats, and geopolitical developments. More signs of US labor market cooling, signs of escalation rather than thaw in the US vs. RoW tariff conflict, and renewed TWD appreciation that is a reminder of appreciation pressures on surplus FX increase our conviction in a strategic bearish dollar view in the run-up to tariff holiday expiry in July. Middle East tensions are a risk to navigate rather than a game changer for the bearish USD view; a limited USD squeeze is possible but likely not much more than that given the incentives of Gulf countries to contain the conflict.
Macro Trade Recommendations: Stay short USD after encouraging data and levels breaks – short USD vs EUR, JPY, AUD & NZD. Reduce some net exposure following Middle East developments; take profit on CAD/NOK shorts. Tighten stop on EUR/Scandi shorts; hold GBP/Scandi shorts on softer local data.
Emerging Markets FX: OW EM FX, supported by slower US growth and diminishing US exceptionalism. Prefer EM Asia ‘creditor’ currencies, CEE euro-proxies, stay selective in commodity and frontier markets.
FX Derivatives: Gamma model shifted defensive. Hedge geopolitics with [safe haven/USD up && high beta/USD dn] duals. Buy EUR-CAD via USD corr swap that is realizing 20pts above implieds. Buy a net defensive long USD/SEK vs EUR/SEK vol RV.
Technicals: 1.1694/1.1881 the next upside levels for EUR/USD. Cable forms downside reversal pattern at longer-term channel resistance. USD/JPY coils above 140 support. AUD/USD rally up against 0.6535-0.655 Fibonacci resistance."
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Moody's has downgraded the US's long-term credit rating to Aa1 trom Aaa. The move may not have been fully expected today. But it was the last holdout among they S&P and Fitch to demote the USA from the top rating, and they placed negative outlook on the US last year (now stable). Fiscal deterioration, both past and anticipated as Congress wrangles with the Republican fiscal bill, is cited as the key factor. From the release (link):
The "extraordinary measures" available to Treasury to stave off a debt default were down to $82B as of May 14, per a Treasury Department release today.

There was mixed news on the housing and wholesale/manufacturing sales fronts this week, which on net look to slightly upwardly bias Q1 GDP estimates, pending next week's retail sales reading.
Housing starts blew through expectations at 278.6k in April (226.2k expected, 214.2k prior). This came after building permits fell a worse-than-expected 4.1% M/M in March as reported Wednesday.

On the sales front, March data was soft but positive versus expectations and could add a slight upward drift to Q1 GDP expectations.
