Forex
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 edges higher as Fed rates view sets direction
By Chuck Mikolajczak
NEW YORK (Reuters) -The dollar edged higher on Tuesday in thin holiday trading as the expected slower path of interest rate cuts from the U.S. Federal Reserve compared with other global central banks continued to command market direction.
The greenback has jumped more than 7% since the end of September, powered in part by growing expectations the U.S. economy will see accelerated growth under policies from President-elect Donald Trump, while sticky inflation has dampened expectations on how aggressive the Fed will be in reducing interest rates.
Those expectations for the U.S. stand in contrast to growth forecasts and the interest rate views for other global economies and central banks, which have led to expanding interest rate differentials.
The Fed last week projected a more measured path of rate cuts than the market had been anticipating, providing another boost to U.S. Treasury yields, with the benchmark 10-year note yield reaching a 7-month high of 4.629% on Tuesday.
“The markets are all having a little bit of a Christmas bonus with the election and they’re expecting positive things,” said Joseph Trevisani, senior analyst at FX Street in New York.
“Certainly that’s true for the dollar because we’ve seen a pullback in the expectations for further rate cuts, and as we all know, the most important factor for the currency markets is the rate structure between the central banks.”
The , which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies, rose 0.14% to 108.24, with the euro down 0.15% at $1.0389. The index is on track for its fifth gain in the past six sessions.
Trading volumes are likely to be thin through next week as the year draws to a close, with the economic calendar very light, and analysts expect rates to be the main driver for the foreign exchange market until the U.S. employment report on Jan. 10.
Sterling weakened 0.06% to $1.2527.
Against the yen, the dollar strengthened 0.1% to 157.34 as the Japanese currency remains near levels that have recently prompted Japanese authorities to intervene in an effort to support it.
Minutes from the Bank of Japan’s meeting last week showed policymakers agreed in October to keep raising interest rates if the economy moves in line with their forecast, but some stressed the need for caution on uncertainty over U.S. economic policy.
Trump’s return to the White House has brought about uncertainty over how his expected policies for tariffs, lower taxes and immigration curbs might affect policy.
Forex
Dollar retains strength; euro near two-year low
Investing.com – The US dollar rose in thin holiday-impacted trade Tuesday, retaining recent strength as traders prepared for fewer Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2025.
At 04:25 ET (09:25 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.1% higher to 107.905, near the recently hit two-year high.
Dollar remains in demand
The dollar has been in demand since the Federal Reserve outlined a hawkish outlook for its interest rates after its last policy meeting of the year last week, projecting just two 25 bp rate cuts in 2025.
In fact, markets are now pricing in just about 35 basis points of easing for 2025, which has in turn sent US Treasury yields surging, boosting the dollar.
The two-year Treasury yield last stood at 4.34%, while the benchmark 10-year yield steadied near a seven-month high at 4.59%.
“We think this hawkish re-tuning of the Fed’s communication will lay the foundation for sustained dollar strengthening into the new year,” said analysts at ING,in a note.
Trading volumes are likely to thin out as the year-end approaches, with this trading week shortened by the festive period.
Euro near to two-year low
In Europe, fell 0.1% to 1.0396, near a two-year low, with the set to cut interest rates more rapidly than its US rival as the eurozone struggles to record any growth.
The ECB lowered its key rate earlier this month for the fourth time this year, and President Christine Lagarde said earlier this week that the eurozone was getting “very close” to reaching the central bank’s medium-term inflation goal.
“If the incoming data continue to confirm our baseline, the direction of travel is clear and we expect to lower interest rates further,” Lagarde said in a speech in Vilnius.
Inflation in the eurozone was 2.3% last month and the ECB expects it to settle at its 2% target next year.
traded largely flat at 1.2531, with sterling showing signs of weakness after data showed that Britain’s economy failed to grow in the third quarter, and with Bank of England policymakers voting 6-3 to keep interest rates on hold last week, a more dovish split than expected.
Bank of Japan stance in focus
In Asia, fell 0.1% to 157.03, after rising as high as 158 yen in recent sessions, after the signaled that it will take its time to consider more interest rate hikes.
edged 0.1% higher to 7.3021, remaining close to a one-year high as the prospect of more fiscal spending and looser monetary conditions in the coming year weighed on the currency.
Beijing signaled that it will ramp up fiscal spending in 2025 to support slowing economic growth.
Forex
Asia FX muted, dollar recovers as markets look to slower rate cuts
Investing.com– Most Asian currencies moved in a tight range on Tuesday, while the dollar extended overnight gains as traders positioned for a slower pace of interest rate cuts in the coming year.
Trading volumes were muted before the Christmas break, while most regional currencies were nursing steep losses against the greenback for the year.
Asian currencies weakened sharply last week after the Federal Reserve effectively halved its outlook for rate cuts in 2025, citing concerns over sticky U.S. inflation.
Dollar near 2-year high on hawkish rate outlook
The and both rose about 0.1% in Asian trade, extending overnight gains and coming back in sight of a two-year high hit last week.
While the greenback did see some weakness after data read lower than expected for November, this was largely offset by traders dialing back expectations for interest rate cuts in 2025.
The Fed signaled only two rate cuts in the coming year, less than prior forecasts of four.
Higher U.S. rates diminish the appeal of risk-driven Asian markets, limiting the amount of capital flowing into the region and pressuring regional markets.
Asia FX pressured by sticky US rate outlook
Most Asian currencies weakened in recent sessions on the prospect of slower rate cuts in the U.S., while uncertainty over local monetary policy and slowing economic growth also weighed.
The Japanese yen’s pair fell 0.1% on Tuesday after rising as high as 158 yen in recent sessions, after the Bank of Japan signaled that it will take its time to consider more interest rate hikes.
The Australian dollar’s pair fell 0.2% after the minutes of the Reserve Bank’s December meeting showed policymakers saw an eventual easing in monetary policy, citing some progress in bringing down inflation. But they still flagged potential upside risks for inflation.
The Chinese yuan’s pair rose 0.1% and remained close to a one-year high, as the prospect of more fiscal spending and looser monetary conditions in the coming year weighed on the currency.
Beijing signaled that it will ramp up fiscal spending in 2025 to support slowing economic growth.
The Singapore dollar’s pair rose 0.1%, while the Indian rupee’s pair rose 0.1% after hitting record highs above 85 rupees.
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