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Meet Dominique Dwor-Frecaut

Dominique Dwor-Frecaut

Dominique Dwor-Frecaut is Chief US Economist at Macro Hive, specializing in US economics and monetary policy. She completed her Master’s and Ph.D. in Economics from the London School of Economics, and her first major position in finance was as an economist at the IMF. 

After that, Dominique continued to rack up experience, first as a-Singapore-based EM strategist, then  as Portfolio Strategist at Bridgewater Associates followed by a stint as Head of Research at a NYC-based startup macro hedge fund. 

Dominique’s expertise lies in macroeconomics and monetary policy, and she has a strong record of producing alpha-generating insights and successful calls in FX and rates. As someone who revels in ‘challenging the consensus,’ she is responsible for generating research that has practical implications for Macro Hive’s portfolio.

Before joining Macro Hive in November 2019, Dominique was a Senior Associate at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and then a Senior Macro Strategist at a LA-based macro hedge fund.

Dominique’s expertise is regularly called upon by numerous financial organizations, including Bloomberg and Real Vision

Twitter: Dominique Dwor-Frecaut (@firstkicktires) / Twitter

LinkedIn: (1) Dominique Dwor-Frecaut | LinkedIn

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Recent Articles

  1. US Fiscal Balance to Weaken

    Dominique Dwor-Frecaut

    Summary The fiscal stance has tightened since January, but this seems unlikely to last as some expenditure cuts are being litigated. Also, the increase in US tariff revenues has slowed considerably. Tariffs provide the Trump administration with additional policy flexibility, which it could use to implement stimulus if growth remains slow (my base case). Long […]

  2. Macro Consensus Challenger: Weak Demand Keeps Inflation in Check

    Dominique Dwor-Frecaut

    Summary July CPI roughly aligned with expectations. The passthrough from US tariffs to goods was weaker than in June. Shelter costs were marginally higher but will slow further due to weakening rental and property markets. An acceleration in supercore inflation was driven by medical costs, perennial outperformers, and by a bunching of increases in other […]

  3. Replacing Fed’s Kugler Unlikely to Trigger Deep Cutting Cycle

    Dominique Dwor-Frecaut

    Summary US growth is likely to remain below 1.5% over the next year or so due to immigration collapse and consumer debt stabilisation. The Trump administration is likely to react through fiscal stimulus as monetary policy will likely remain beyond its reach. Because the growth slowdown is partly supply driven, a fiscal stimulus could bring […]

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