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Dollar dips against euro, gains on yen as Fed policy stays in focus

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Dollar dips against euro, gains on yen as Fed policy stays in focus
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Four thousand U.S. dollars are counted out by a banker counting currency at a bank in Westminster, Colorado November 3, 2009. REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo

By Karen Brettell

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The dollar dipped against the euro on Friday but gained against the yen as investors evaluated comments by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell that the central bank could hike rates again if inflation remains above its target.

The Japanese currency also remained on watch for possible intervention as it holds near a one-year low against the greenback.

Powell and other Fed officials said on Thursday that they are still not sure that interest rates are high enough to finish the battle with inflation, with Powell saying that the Fed may get further help in taming price increases from improvements in the supply of goods, services and labor.

Markets are looking for “the ray of sunshine” that the Fed is done hiking rates, even though Powell since Jackson Hole has been clear that it will depend on data as it comes in, said Lou Brien, market strategist at DRW Trading in Chicago.

“Yesterday was another one of those occasions where Powell reminded that we have to take care of inflation, we don’t know that we’ve done enough yet – we will know as the data unfolds but we might have to do more if the data doesn’t unfold as we anticipate,” he said.

Consumer price inflation and retail sales data due next week are expected to offer the next clues on whether further rate increases are likely.

The dollar briefly gained on Friday after a survey showed that U.S. consumer sentiment fell for a fourth straight month in November, and households’ expectations for inflation rose again, with their medium-term outlook for price pressures shooting to the highest in more than a dozen years.

The was last down 0.06% on the day at 105.85.

The dollar tumbled last week after Powell was interpreted as striking a dovish tone after the Fed’s two-day meeting, with softer-then-expected jobs data on Friday adding to a belief that the Fed has finished hiking interest rates.

Fed funds futures traders are pricing in a 22% chance of an additional hike by January, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch Tool.

Some analysts, however, see the market as too complacent about the risk that the Fed is not yet done.

“Markets continue to underestimate the persistence of inflation globally and that in turn leads them to underestimate the likelihood of further monetary tightening. Right now, market pricing is leaning heavily to rate cuts by mid-2024 and we suspect this will have to be rethought in the coming weeks,” Win Thin, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman said in a note on Friday.

Fed Bank of San Francisco President Mary Daly said on Friday she is not ready to say yet whether the central bank is done raising its interest rate target to get inflation back to 2%.

The dollar also spiked on Thursday in line with Treasury yields after the U.S. Treasury Department saw weak demand for a $24 billion 30-year bond auction.

It was not clear whether demand for the debt was impacted by a ransomware attack on the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China’s (ICBC) U.S. arm, which has disrupted some trades in the U.S. Treasury market.

The euro gained 0.10% to $1.0679.

European Central Bank interest rates kept at a record high for long enough could return inflation to the bank’s 2% target, ECB President Christine Lagarde said on Friday.

Against the Japanese yen, the dollar gained 0.16% to 151.59 yen, the highest since Nov. 1. Traders remained on alert for potential intervention in the Japanese currency, which is near a one-year low of 151.74 reached last week. The yen is on track for its worst week since August, with the dollar gaining 1.48% against the currency this week.

The euro also hit a 15-year high of 161.95 yen on Friday.

The Norwegian crown jumped after data showed Norway’s inflation was stronger than expected in October, boosting market rate hike expectations.

The dollar was last down 0.94% at 11.13 crowns to the dollar.

The Australian dollar fell to $0.63395, the lowest since Nov. 1. It has tumbled since the Reserve Bank of Australia on Tuesday raised interest rates to a 12-year high but played down the probability of further increases.

, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, was at $37,167, having peaked at $37,978 in the previous session, its highest level since May 2022.

Prices of the digital assets have surged after speculation of an imminent approval of BlackRock (NYSE:)’s spot bitcoin ETF.

A spot crypto ETF would make the sector “more accessible for institutional investors to enter the crypto space, likely boosting demand and subsequently prices,” said Carl Szantyr, managing partner of digital asset hedge fund Blockstone Capital.

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Currency bid prices at 3:01PM (2001 GMT)

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

Previous Change

Session

Dollar index 105.8500 105.9200 -0.06% 2.280% +106.0100 +105.7400

Euro/Dollar $1.0679 $1.0668 +0.10% -0.34% +$1.0693 +$1.0657

Dollar/Yen 151.5900 151.3500 +0.16% +15.62% +151.5950 +151.2300

Euro/Yen 161.88 161.44 +0.27% +15.38% +161.9400 +161.3600

Dollar/Swiss 0.9027 0.9031 -0.04% -2.38% +0.9046 +0.9003

Sterling/Dollar $1.2216 $1.2221 -0.03% +1.02% +$1.2237 +$1.2187

Dollar/Canadian 1.3810 1.3806 +0.03% +1.93% +1.3855 +1.3792

Aussie/Dollar $0.6356 $0.6366 -0.16% -6.76% +$0.6369 +$0.6340

Euro/Swiss 0.9637 0.9632 +0.05% -2.61% +0.9643 +0.9620

Euro/Sterling 0.8739 0.8725 +0.16% -1.19% +0.8755 +0.8718

NZ $0.5888 $0.5894 -0.10% -7.27% +$0.5904 +$0.5879

Dollar/Dollar

Dollar/Norway 11.1270 11.2310 -0.94% +13.36% +11.2190 +11.1150

Euro/Norway 11.8845 11.9629 -0.66% +13.25% +11.9774 +11.8629

Dollar/Sweden 10.9150 10.9234 +0.04% +4.87% +10.9439 +10.8795

Euro/Sweden 11.6557 11.6506 +0.04% +4.54% +11.6675 +11.6256

Forex

Dollar bounces after Fed-inspired losses; sterling gains ahead of BoE

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Investing.com – The U.S. dollar edged higher Thursday, bouncing off its over one-year low after the Federal Reserve announced an outsized interest rate cut, while sterling gained ahead of the Bank of England’s latest policy-setting meeting. 

At 04:25 ET (08:25 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.1% higher to 100.410, having fallen to a more than 12-month low in the previous session.

Large Fed cut confirmed 

The started its latest rate-cutting cycle on Wednesday, trimming interest rates for the first time since March 2020 by a hefty 50 basis points to a range of 4.75% to 5%.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that risks between higher inflation and more labor market weakness were now evenly balanced, and that the central bank was likely to cut rates further amid growing confidence that inflation will fall.

But Powell also said that the bank had no intention of returning to an ultra-low rate regime as seen during the pandemic, and that the Fed’s neutral rate will now be much higher than seen in the past. 

“Where does the Fed’s decision leave the dollar,” analysts at ING ask, in a note. “In our view, still in a softer position compared to most developed market peers. Powell tried to mitigate the dovishness of the outsized rate cut, but that it would be hard to fight the perception that it was the dovish market pricing that pushed the Fed over the line for the 50bp move. If the Fed is perceived as unwilling to disappoint market expectations, investors may continue to prefer erring on the dovish side.”

Attention turns to the release of the weekly data, for the latest clues over the health of the important labor market.  

Sterling in demand ahead of BoE meeting

In Europe, rose 0.3% to 1.3253, after climbing to 1.3298 in the previous session, its strongest level since March 2022.

The meets later in the session, and is expected to hold its key interest rate at 5%, after kicking off its easing with a 25-bp reduction in August.

“The inflation picture simply hasn’t improved enough to warrant more easing just yet,” said ING.

UK came in at 2.2% on an annual basis last month, close to the bank’s medium-term target, but services inflation is running hot at an annual 5.6%.

traded 0.3% higher to 1.1149, not far from the three-week high hit in the previous session.

The cut rates for the second time this year last week, but a degree of uncertainty exists over when the next move will be.

Eurozone inflation is still not as low as the ECB would like, Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel said on Wednesday, so interest rates need to remain sufficiently high to resolve price pressures.

While inflation fell to 2.2% in August and may fall even closer to the ECB’s 2% target this month, it will likely rise again towards the end of the year and could end 2024 around 2.5%.

Yen retreats ahead of BOJ meeting

rose 0.3% to 142.75 as traders also positioned for no changes to local interest rates after a meeting on Friday.

The central bank is widely expected to keep rates unchanged, but could still signal future rate hikes on an elevated outlook for inflation. 

Japanese is also due on Friday.

traded 0.2% lower to 7.0698, ahead of a decision by the People’s Bank of China on Friday. The central bank is expected to leave this key rate unchanged.

 

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Forex

Bullish bets steady on Asian currencies as Fed easing bets soften dollar, Reuters poll shows

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By Sameer Manekar

(Reuters) – Analysts remained bullish on most Asian currencies despite marginally dialling back some bets, a Reuters poll showed on Thursday, as a defensive U.S. dollar driven by a dovish Federal Reserve enhanced the appeal of risk-sensitive assets.

Long bets were the highest on the Malaysian ringgit and the Thai baht, with those on the latter at their peak since January 2023, driven by strong growth fundamentals and stabilising politics.

Responses to the fortnightly poll of 10 economists and analysts were received before the U.S. Federal Reserve’s half-point rate cut and Bank Indonesia’s surprise quarter-point rate cut on Wednesday.

Anticipation of Fed rate cuts pushed the dollar to the defensive, providing a much-needed breathing space for emerging markets and improving their allure. Most Asian currencies logged a stellar recovery in August against the dollar.

“We do not rule out further bouts of USD weakness in the weeks ahead and expect overall downward pressure on USD/Asia FX to be sustained,” analysts at Barclays said.

The is trending near 100 against a basket of major currencies, down from 104 at the end of July.

The analysts said they expect Asian currencies to continue to appreciating in the fourth quarter, but foresee a reversal in the first half of 2025.

Ryota Abe, an economist at Sumitomo Mitsui (NYSE:) Banking Corp, said the market view of Fed rate cuts by the year-end “looks excessive” which could lead to correction in Asian emerging market currencies.

Bullish bets on the Chinese yuan and Singapore dollar were dialled back to levels seen four weeks ago, while those on the Philippine peso hit a four-year peak.

Analysts were long on the Indonesian rupiah for the fourth consecutive iteration of the poll – the longest since May 2023 – underlining the recent appreciation stemming from robust economic fundamentals and growing inflows into emerging markets.

The rupiah has appreciated more than 6% since July and is expected to continue marching on after Bank Indonesia’s (BI) surprise rate cut decision to support growth, front-running the Fed.

Barclays analysts said BI will “likely broadly match or slightly under-deliver versus the Fed in terms of the magnitude of total cuts” which should not “necessarily see the IDR fall out of markets’ favour from a rates-differentials perspective”.

The Indian rupee continued to remain out of analysts’ favour, although short positions were halved since early August as the currency staged a recovery following a sell-off driven by the unwinding of yen carry trades.

The Asian currency positioning poll is focused on what analysts and fund managers believe are the current market positions in nine Asian emerging market currencies: the Chinese yuan, South Korean won, Singapore dollar, Indonesian rupiah, Taiwan dollar, Indian rupee, Philippine peso, Malaysian ringgit and the Thai baht.

The poll uses estimates of net long or short positions on a scale of minus 3 to plus 3. A score of plus 3 indicates the market is significantly long U.S. dollars.

The figures include positions held through non-deliverable forwards (NDFs).

The survey findings are provided below (positions in U.S. dollar versus each currency):

DATE

19-Sep-24 -0.67 -0.9 -1.12 -1.18 -0.66 0.33 -1.3 -1.1 -1.33

05-Sep-24 -0.85 -1.09 -1.26 -1.05 -0.77 0.21 -1.46 -1.00 -1.22

22-Aug-24 -0.62 -0.93 -1.08 -1.26 -0.70 0.21 -1.57 -1.03 -1.16

08-Aug-24 -0.02 0.05 -0.61 -0.02 0.59 0.60 -0.78 -0.29 -0.57

25-Jul-24 1.07 0.79 -0.33 0.35 0.86 0.12 0.39 0.43 0.02

11-Jul-24 1.05 0.87 0.06 0.73 0.68 0.22 1.03 0.86 0.51

27-Jun-24 1.34 1.28 0.80 1.49 0.88 0.46 1.00 1.37 0.91

13-Jun-24 0.95 0.87 0.62 1.22 0.64 0.37 1.00 1.23 0.92

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: U.S. Dollar and Chinese Yuan banknotes are seen in this illustration taken January 30, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

30-May-24 1.05 0.72 0.33 0.94 0.53 0 0.81 1.19 1.00

16-May-24 1.05 0.96 0.35 0.96 1.02 0.39 1.23 1.29 1.00

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Asia FX muted as dollar rises past bumper rate cut; yen down before BOJ

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Investing.com– Most Asian currencies moved in a flat-to-low range on Thursday as the dollar firmed sharply after an outsized interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve was offset by less dovish signals on future rates. 

The Japanese yen was among the worst performers for the day, retreating amid pressure from the dollar and as traders priced in no changes to interest rates by the Bank of Japan later this week. 

Broader Asian currencies were muted tracking mixed signals from the Fed. 

Dollar rises past 50 bps rate cut, Fed outlook less dovish 

The and both rose about 0.4% in Asian trade, extending overnight gains.

Strength in the greenback came even as the Fed – the higher end of market expectations- to a range of 4.75% to 5%.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that risks between higher inflation and more labor market weakness were now evenly balanced, and that the central bank was likely to cut rates further amid growing confidence that inflation will fall.

But Powell also said that the bank had no intention of returning to an ultra-low rate regime as seen during the pandemic, and that the Fed’s neutral rate will now be much higher than seen in the past. 

While traders were still pricing in at least 125 bps worth of cuts by end-2024, Powell’s comments spurred expectations that rates will be higher than initially expected in the medium and long term. 

This notion pressured most Asian currencies. 

Japanese yen weakens with BOJ on tap

The Japanese yen’s pair rose 0.6% to 143.12 yen and was among the worst performers in Asia. 

The currency was pressured by strength in the dollar, while traders also positioned for no changes to local interest rates after a on Friday.

The central bank is widely expected to keep rates unchanged, but could still signal future rate hikes on an elevated outlook for inflation. Japanese is also due on Friday.

Broader Asian currencies were mostly mixed. The Australian dollar’s pair rose 0.4%, buoyed by a stronger-than-expected reading on the in August. 

Strength in the labor market gives the Reserve Bank of Australia more headroom to keep rates high for longer, which it is more inclined to do amid signs of sticky inflation in the country. 

The Chinese yuan’s pair reversed early gains to trade sideways, with focus squarely on a l decision by the People’s Bank on Friday. The central bank is expected to leave the LPR unchanged.

The South Korean won’s pair jumped 1% as local trade resumed after three days of holidays. The country’s shrank slightly in August. 

The Indian rupee’s pair was flat, but moved further away from the 84 rupee level. The Singapore dollar’s pair was flat.

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