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Forex

Dollar rises to six-month high after US data; weak yen prompts warning

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Dollar rises to six-month high after US data; weak yen prompts warning
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: U.S. Dollar and Chinese Yuan banknotes are seen in this illustration picture taken June 14, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration/File Photo

By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The dollar climbed to a six-month peak on Wednesday, reversing earlier losses, after U.S. data showed the services sector surprisingly picked up steam last month amid a rise in new orders and businesses paying higher prices, suggesting persistent inflation pressure.

The greenback recovered against most currencies after the data, with the euro and sterling hitting three-month lows and the yen touching session troughs. The U.S. currency, however, pulled back a bit in the afternoon as volume thinned.

The was last at 104.84, up 0.1%, after earlier hitting a fresh six-month high of 105.03.

The euro and sterling fell to three-month lows after the data and were last flat at $1.0726 and down 0.5% at $1.2505, respectively.

Data showed the Institute for Supply Management (ISM)’s non-manufacturing PMI rose to 54.5 last month, the highest since February and up from 52.7 in July. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the non-manufacturing PMI would decrease to 52.5.

“It’s clear the U.S. economy remains much stronger by comparison than most of the rest of the G10 and runs substantially less risk of entering a recession,” said Helen Given, FX trader at Monex USA in Washington.

“With the UK and the eurozone teetering on the brink of true contraction, investors really have little choice but to place their faith in the U.S. (economy).”

The data suggested interest rates will remain elevated for longer, although it does not alter expectations that the Federal Reserve will pause its rate hikes at a meeting later this month.

For the November and December policy meetings, the chances of a rate hike increased to 48.4% and 46.6%, respectively, on Wednesday, according to the CME’s FedWatch. Those odds were at 45.2% for November and 43.5% for December late on Tuesday.

Fed officials the last two days, however, struck a dovish tone suggesting the U.S. central bank could pause again for the next several meetings to further assess the impact of monetary tightening on economic data.

Boston Fed President Susan Collins said Wednesday the central bank will proceed carefully when it comes to its next monetary policy steps.

Her comments followed similar remarks by Fed Governor Christopher Waller on Tuesday. Waller said in a CNBC interview that “there’s nothing that is saying we need to do anything imminent anytime soon, so we can just sit there, wait for the data, see if things continue” on their current trajectory.

Against the yen, the dollar trimmed losses, last down little changed at 147.69 yen. Earlier in the session, it rose to 147.82, the lowest since Nov. 4.

The currency market remains on yen-intervention watch, however.

The yen strengthened to as much as 147.02 per U.S. dollar after Japan’s top currency diplomat, Masato Kanda, said they will not rule out options if speculative moves persist, the strongest warning since mid-August.

Kanda, Japan’s vice-minister of finance for international affairs, has been the central figure in the country’s efforts to stem the sharp decline of the yen since last year.

Japan intervened in currency markets 12 months ago when the dollar rose past 145 yen, prompting the Ministry of Finance to buy the yen and push the pair back to around 140 yen. It intervened again in October last year when the currency pair hit 150 yen.

Also on Wednesday, the Fed released its so-called “Beige Book”, a snapshot of the U.S. economy. The report showed a moderation in economic growth in recent weeks, with inflation slowing in most parts of the country.

The dollar showed little reaction to the report.

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Currency bid prices at 3:56PM (1956 GMT)

Description RIC Last U.S. Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid

Previous Change

Session

Dollar index 104.8300 104.7500 +0.09% 1.295% +105.0300 +104.5900

Euro/Dollar $1.0726 $1.0722 +0.04% +0.10% +$1.0749 +$1.0703

Dollar/Yen 147.6550 147.7000 -0.03% +12.62% +147.8150 +147.0200

Euro/Yen 158.38 158.39 -0.01% +12.88% +158.4600 +157.7800

Dollar/Swiss 0.8913 0.8897 +0.17% -3.61% +0.8944 +0.8882

Sterling/Dollar $1.2505 $1.2564 -0.45% +3.42% +$1.2587 +$1.2484

Dollar/Canadian 1.3640 1.3641 -0.01% +0.67% +1.3675 +1.3623

Aussie/Dollar $0.6379 $0.6379 +0.02% -6.41% +$0.6405 +$0.6359

Euro/Swiss 0.9561 0.9536 +0.26% -3.38% +0.9575 +0.9534

Euro/Sterling 0.8575 0.8533 +0.49% -3.04% +0.8577 +0.8529

NZ $0.5870 $0.5884 -0.23% -7.55% +$0.5903 +$0.5860

Dollar/Dollar

Dollar/Norway 10.7180 10.7080 +0.14% +9.26% +10.7510 +10.6780

Euro/Norway 11.4989 11.4909 +0.07% +9.58% +11.5236 +11.4648

Dollar/Sweden 11.1172 11.0921 +0.26% +6.82% +11.1408 +11.0597

Euro/Sweden 11.9253 11.8944 +0.26% +6.96% +11.9373 +11.8878

Forex

Dollar soft, yen strong as bets firm on aggressive Fed rate cut

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By Vidya Ranganathan and Samuel Indyk

LONDON (Reuters) -The dollar was lower on Monday while the yen hit its highest level in more than a year, as market participants increasingly expected an oversized rate cut by the Federal Reserve later this week.

The dollar traded at 140.01 yen at 1140 GMT, after falling to as low as 139.58 yen in the session.

This represented a further drop from the 140.285 end-December low it struck on Friday to levels last seen in July 2023.

The Fed’s Sept. 17-18 meeting is the highlight of a busy week that also has the Bank of England and Bank of Japan announcing policy decisions on Thursday and Friday, respectively.

Fed speakers and data releases over the past month have had markets shifting the odds around the size of this week’s rate cut, debating whether the Fed will head off weakness in the labour market with aggressive cuts or take a slower wait-and-see approach.

Futures markets were fully pricing a quarter-point cut from the Fed on Wednesday, with around a 60% chance they opt for a larger 50 basis point move. Last week, the chances of a larger move stood at about 15%.

“It’s all about the Fed and the question about whether it will be a big 50 basis point cut or a smaller 25 basis one,” said Niels Christensen, chief analyst at Nordea. “That’s why the dollar is softer across the board.”

The , which measures the currency against six peers, was down 0.3% to 100.69.

Treasury yields have been falling in the run-up to the highly anticipated Fed meeting, particularly as odds stack up for the Fed to get aggressive with a half-point rate cut.

Benchmark 10-year yields are down 30 basis points in about two weeks. Two-year yields, more closely linked to monetary policy expectations, were around 3.55% and down from roughly 3.94% two weeks ago.

Selling the dollar for yen has been the cleanest trade for investors looking to play the drop in Treasury yields, said Chris Weston, head of research at Australian online broker Pepperstone.

“While speculators are short and riding this lower, this trend is clearly one to align with,” he said.

Investors are also looking to the Bank of Japan’s interest rate decision on Friday, when it is expected to keep its short-term policy rate target steady at 0.25%, having raised rates twice already this year.

BOJ board members have indicated they are keen to see rates higher, and the narrowing gap between rates in Japan and other major currencies has spurred the yen higher and caused billions of dollars worth of yen-funded carry trades to be unwound.

“We are expecting higher rates in Japan and lower rates in the U.S., so the interest rate differential is favouring a stronger yen against the dollar,” Nordea’s Christensen said.

Sterling rose 0.6% to $1.3199. The euro was up 0.4% at $1.1120.

The European Central Bank cut interest rates by 25 bps last week, but ECB President Christine Lagarde dampened expectations for another reduction in borrowing costs next month.

The ECB should almost certainly wait until December before cutting interest rates again to be certain it is not making a policy mistake in easing too quickly, ECB Governing Council member Peter Kazimir said on Monday.

The Bank of England is expected to hold its key interest rate at 5% on Thursday, after kicking off its easing with a 25-bp reduction in August. Futures markets were pricing in around a 38% chance of a quarter-point rate cut on Thursday, versus a 20% chance on Friday.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Japanese yen banknotes at the National Printing Bureau in Tokyo, Japan, November 21, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo

Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem meanwhile opened the door to stepping up the pace of interest rate cuts, the Financial Times reported on Sunday. The BoC, after keeping its key policy rate at 5%, a more than two-decade high, for a year, has trimmed it by a quarter point three times in a row since June.

The U.S. dollar was little changed against its Canadian counterpart at C$1.3581.

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Forex

Dollar retreats ahead of Fed meeting; Euro, sterling rise

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Investing.com – The U.S. dollar fell Monday, while the euro and sterling gained, ahead of the expected start of a rate-cutting cycle by the Federal Reserve later this week.

At 04:35 ET (08:35 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.4% lower to 100.357.

Large Fed cut coming? 

The concludes its latest policy-setting meeting on Wednesday, and is widely expected to start cutting interest rates from the 5.25%-5.5% range that has been in place for the last 14 months.

A reduction in rates has been widely flagged by Fed officials, with the U.S. falling last month to its lowest level since February 2021. 

However, there remains a degree of uncertainty over the size of the cut, and the greenback fell sharply on Friday after media reports once again fueled speculation the Fed could deliver a hefty 50-basis-point interest rate cut.

Fed fund futures showed traders are pricing in a 59% chance of a 50-basis point cut at the September meeting, according to CME FedWatch. 

U.S. Treasury yields have retreated again Monday in anticipation of a cut, with benchmark 10-year yields down 30 basis points in about two weeks.

The Fed’s rate decision will be followed by a post-meeting press conference during which Chairman Jerome Powell could provide hints about the further outlook for rates and the economy. 

Euro, sterling soar 

In Europe, traded 0.4% higher to 1.1115, with the single currency in demand despite the European Central Bank cutting interest rates by 25 bps last week.

ECB President Christine Lagarde dampened expectations for another reduction in borrowing costs next month, stating the rate path was not predetermined and that the central bank would decide rates meeting by meeting, with no pre-commitments.

ECB chief economist and Vice President speak at events on Monday.

climbed 0.4% to 1.3173, ahead of the latest policy-setting meeting on Thursday.

The U.K. central bank is expected to hold its key interest rate at 5%, after kicking off its easing with a 25-bp reduction in August.

“Sterling continues to trade on the strong side. Dollar softness is the dominant theme and we have yet to have much bearish sterling news at all,” said analysts at ING, in a note.

Yen soars ahead of BOJ meeting

The yen rose 0.8% against the dollar to 139.76, firming sharply to an over eight-month high, with a meeting on tap later this week.

The Bank of Japan’s interest rate decision on Friday is expected to result in the short-term policy rate target remaining steady at 0.25%.

That said, BOJ board members have indicated they are keen to see rates higher, which would likely see the unwinding of more yen-funded carry trades.

traded largely unchanged at 7.0930, with regional trading volumes muted on account of market holidays in Japan, China, and South Korea.

 

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Forex

Fed’s drag on the dollar may soon peak: Barclays

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Investing.com — As the U.S. Federal Reserve approaches a key turning point in its tightening cycle, the drag on the may soon reach its peak. 

Analysts at Barclays suggest that, while further weakness in the dollar is possible, the worst of its depreciation is likely behind us. 

The evolving outlook for U.S. monetary policy, coupled with global economic conditions, points to a more stable dollar in the months ahead, even as the Fed’s rate-cutting cycle begins. 

Over the past several months, market participants have been increasingly pricing in the likelihood of earlier and faster rate cuts by the Fed. These expectations have been driven by the perception of a slowing U.S. economy and the Fed’s dovish shifts. 

Real terminal rates, which reflect where the market expects the Fed’s tightening cycle to end, have dropped, from nearly 200 basis points earlier in the summer to under 50 basis points in recent weeks.

Despite this downward shift in rate expectations, Barclays analysts believe that most of the dollar’s depreciation has already occurred. 

The , which tracks the dollar against a basket of major currencies, has seen a decline since mid-2023. However, the pace of further depreciation is expected to slow as the Fed’s monetary tightening cycle approaches its end.

“That said, the bulk of dollar weakness tends to occur ahead of the Fed easing cycles, and the move has already been chunky by historical standards,” the analysts said.

The dollar typically bottoms shortly after the first cut as the market begins to reassess the economic outlook. This pattern is playing out again, with the market already pricing in future cuts and causing the dollar to weaken accordingly​.

Yet, as the rate-cutting cycle progresses, the market often corrects its expectations for the depth of the cuts. If the U.S. economy avoids a severe recession, the Fed may cut rates more cautiously than anticipated, which could lead to a stabilization or even a rebound in the dollar. 

In milder economic slowdowns, the dollar tends to recover once the market realizes the Fed is not cutting as aggressively as feared.

Barclays underscores that several factors are likely to limit further dollar depreciation. One consideration is the possibility of a U.S. recession. 

Should the economy tip into recession, the dollar may strengthen, as investors typically seek the safety of U.S. assets during times of global uncertainty. 

In this risk-averse environment, the dollar’s safe-haven status could once again come into play, especially against emerging market currencies.

Additionally, geopolitical factors, including ongoing tensions in Europe and China, could provide support for the dollar.

Barclays points out that risks related to U.S.-China trade relations and concerns over European political stability could keep the dollar from weakening further. 

The upcoming U.S. presidential election also raises the possibility of shifts in trade policy, which could introduce new volatility into global markets, indirectly supporting the dollar​.

China’s economic slowdown presents another key factor. As China’s growth continues to falter, driven by a declining credit impulse and weakening consumption, the outlook for the Chinese remains bleak. 

A weaker yuan could lend additional support to the dollar, particularly against Asian and emerging market currencies. Barclays notes that as China’s credit impulse weakens, it tends to correlate with a stronger dollar.

Barclays forecasts some additional USD depreciation in the near term, as the market continues to price in Fed rate cuts. 

However, they expect that the extent of further weakness will be modest, with the bulk of the dollar’s decline already behind us.

 As the Fed’s rate-cutting cycle progresses, the dollar may begin to recover, particularly if economic data points to a milder-than-expected downturn.

“Our new forecasts predict some further USD depreciation into Q4 24, but recovery thereafter,” the analysts said.

This recovery could be driven by a recalibration of market expectations regarding the Fed’s rate cuts, alongside improved global risk sentiment. 

Barclays suggests that while bouts of volatility are still possible, the dollar’s broad downward trend may be nearing its end.

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