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Comment for Proposed Rule 89 FR 48968

  • From: Maurice Bransfield
    Organization(s):
    Kingston Chase Consulting, LLC

    Comment No: 73767
    Date: 6/10/2024

    Comment Text:

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/here-s-how-the-dollar-is-tracking-biden-s-chances-of-victory-in-november/ar-BB1nyMjf

    Here’s how the dollar is tracking Biden’s chances of victory in November
    Story by Vivien Lou Chen

    Though the U.S. presidential election is still five months away, analysts are continuing to weigh in on how the race could impact financial markets.

    One example comes from Deutsche Bank strategist Alan Ruskin: In a note on Sunday, he wrote that since the start of 2024, there’s been a 73% correlation between the ICE U.S. Dollar Index and the probability of a victory for President Joe Biden as implied by PredictIt, the New Zealand-based online prediction market.

    “A strong economy is Biden positive and probably USD positive through the rates channel,” Ruskin wrote. “But a stronger economy that keeps inflation expectations elevated would almost certainly be negative for risky assets and Biden’s chances, even as it might support the USD, most obviously versus the high-beta currencies.”

    Meanwhile, the chances of a victory for former President Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee, are also likely to be viewed as USD positive, although “mainly by default because the geopolitics and trade frictions are negative for the CNY (Chinese onshore yuan) and EUR (euro) particularly, and to a lesser degree MXN (Mexico peso),” the strategist added. “This ‘USD-positive-by-default view’ may get watered down, depending on how much the Trump campaign overtly talks about the need for a weaker USD, or attacks Fed independence.”

    Trump’s chances of winning the White House race appear to have declined since the verdict, according to polls. However, PredictIt is still pointing to almost even odds of a victory by either candidate, and strategists are still trying to figure out the possible market implications of the election’s outcome.

    As of Monday afternoon, the U.S. Dollar Index was down 0.5% at around 104.13, but still up by 2.7% since Jan. 1.