* Hawkish veer to Fed's steer
"An absolute snoozefest." That's how TS Lombard's Dario Perkins summed up today's Fed meeting and Chair Jerome Powell's press conference after, as the central bank kept rates on hold as expected. The steer was slightly hawkish - inflation remains elevated and the job market looks a bit sturdier - but there was little market reaction.
Traders still expect another quarter point cut by July, but aren't fully pricing in another one after that. This fits with Powell's view that policy is probably at the higher end of the neutral range. Chances of the next move being a hike? No one's "base case", Powell says.
* U.S. reaffirms 'strong dollar' policy
U.S. President Donald Trump, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and others have weighed in on the dollar's travails, and investors are nervous the selloff snowballs into a rout. Policymakers seeing their currencies super charge in value will be too.
The dollar got some respite on Wednesday, but the selling pressure is likely to return. It is still over-valued on a long-term, fundamental basis, although by how much is open to question. The last 24-48 hours have seen huge swings in FX volatility - investors should expect more of that too.
* 3 out of 4 ain't bad
U.S. tech results are rolling in, and so far, it's looking good - investors cheered Meta, Tesla and IBM, but not Microsoft. Belief in the economic transformative power of AI is broadly intact. But there are a few chinks of shade amid the blinding light.