Connect with us
  • tg

Forex

Dollar edges higher ahead of payrolls; euro weakens

letizo News

Published

on

Investing.com – The US dollar gained marginally Friday, with traders expressing a degree of caution ahead of the eagerly-anticipated monthly jobs report, while the euro continued to show weakness.

At 05:00 ET (10:00 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.1% higher to 105.827, near three-week lows after falling 0.6% overnight. 

Payrolls could drive dollar direction

Dollar bulls have been partially restrained this week after and weekly pointed to a weakening labor market, suggesting the Federal Reserve has scope to cut interest rates further.

However, Fed Chair Jerome Powell, in a speech earlier this week, indicated that the US economy is stronger now than the central bank had expected in September when it began reducing interest rates.

The market is still expecting a rate cut in December, but the official jobs report, due later in the session, could move the dial.

Forecasts are centred on a rise of around 200,000 to jobs in November, rebounding from October’s meager hurricane-impacted 12,000 gain, while the is seen edging up to 4.2% from 4.1%.

“The market is sitting long on the dollar after two months of a Trump-powered rally. Investors like the dollar story into 2025, but the question is whether they have to suffer a position-led shake-out first. Today represents a risk to those positions in the form of the November jobs report,” said analysts at ING, in a note.

Euro hit by weak German data

In Europe, dropped 0.1% to 1.0575, with the single currency hit by data showing unexpectedly fell in October, pointing to further weakness in the eurozone’s dominant economy.

Production was down by 1.0% in October from the previous month, after a upwardly revised decline of 2.0% in September and an increase of 2.6% in August.

“This means that the industrial economy is still in a downturn,” said the German economy ministry in a statement. 

The as a whole grew 0.4% on a quarterly basis in the third quarter, data showed earlier Friday, an annual gain of 0.9%.

This meager growth points to another rate cut by the European Central Bank next week, and the market is pricing in over 150 basis points of easing by the end of 2025.

At the same time, traders are having to factor in more French political turmoil after Prime Minister Michel Barnier lost a no-confidence vote earlier in the week, with President Emmanuel Macron set to install a new prime minister quickly.

The fall of the government leaves France without a clear path toward reducing its budgetary deficit, credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s said on Thursday.

“With less than four weeks until the end of the year, and even less time remaining until the Dec. 21 deadline to pass the budget, regardless of whether a new government is formed, S&P Global Ratings believes that the likelihood of an amended 2025 budget plan to be passed by year-end 2024 is low,” it said.

traded 0.1% higher to 1.2763, with sterling helped by data showing UK house prices rose for the fifth month in a row in November, pointing to a recovering economy.

Mortgage lender said prices rose by 1.3% during the month for the biggest increase so far this year, pushing the annual growth rate up to 4.8%, its strongest level since November 2022.

Asian currencies muted

In Asia, most currencies were subdued on Friday ahead of key US jobs data.

gained 0.3% to 150.57, rose 0.2% to 7.2709, and dropped 0.4% to 0.6426. 

rose 0.5% to 1,419.96, with the pair set to rise 1.8% this week, its biggest weekly rise since early-April, after President Yoon Suk-Yeol’s failed attempt to impose martial law in the country.

slipped marginally to 84.680 after the kept benchmark interest rates unchanged, as expected on Friday, but cut its cash reserve ratio requirement for local banks.

The central bank also lowered its economic growth projection for the current fiscal year and raised its inflation estimate.

 

Forex

Stronger dollar unlikely to limit tariff hit to US consumers – UBS

letizo News

Published

on

Investing.com – The US dollar has gained strongly since the US presidential election in November, but these gains are unlikely to limit the hit that US customers are likely to face from tariffs, according to UBS.

At 08:25 ET (13:25 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.2% lower to 108.950, but was around 1.5% higher over the last month, and remained not far from the more than two-year high seen last week.

The theory is that a stronger dollar lowers US import prices, said analysts at UBS, in a note dated Jan. 17. Those lower prices would partially offset the tax payments US consumers must make to the US Treasury when buying imports.

If the US paid for the Chinese imports, then a stronger dollar would automatically reduce the amount of dollars paid (fewer dollars are exchanged to pay the renminbi price). However, the US pays for practically all its imports in dollars, so this does not happen. 

If the dollar strengthens, the dollar price is unchanged, unless the exporter consciously chooses to lower the dollar price of the goods sold, UBS added.

An exporter to the US might deliberately lower dollar prices, as (in dollar terms) local currency costs are lower. But local currency costs are only a fraction of a manufacturer’s costs. 

“A Chinese electronics manufacturer, importing chips (bought in dollars) and exporting computers to the US (in dollars), will probably keep their dollar prices stable—ignoring currency moves,” UBS added.

The US dollar strengthened against China’s renminbi in 2016 and 2018/19, and US import price inflation for products from China showed no noticeable break with earlier trends. 

The preference seems to have been to reroute supply chains as a way of avoiding trade taxes.

 

Continue Reading

Forex

Dollar slumps after WSJ report; Trump tariffs may be delayed

letizo News

Published

on

Investing.com – The US dollar slumped Monday following a report that indicated that President-elect Donald Trump was set to delay imposing trade tariffs immediately upon his inauguration, an expectation which had boosted the US currency following his November election victory.

At 09:20 ET (14:20 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 1.1% lower to 108.020, having climbed to a more than two-year high last week.

The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that Trump is planning to issue a broad memorandum on his inauguration that directs federal agencies to study trade policies and evaluate US trade relationships with China and America’s continental neighbors—but stops short of imposing new tariffs on his first day in office.

The memo, which the WSJ has seen, suggests that debates are still ongoing within the incoming administration over how to deliver on Trump’s campaign trail promises for hefty tariffs on imports from trade rivals such as China. 

The dollar has gained around 4% since the November presidential election as traders anticipated Trump’s policies will be inflationary, necessitating higher interest rates for a longer period.

“Financial markets are on tenterhooks to see what executive orders newly elected US President Donald Trump will enact on his first day,” said analysts at ING, in a note.

“FX markets are most interested in what he has to say about tariffs and what kind of pain the Oval Office plans to inflict on major trade partners.”

Continue Reading

Forex

USD/CNY: Repo rates surge amid tax payment week-BofA

letizo News

Published

on

Bank of America (BofA) noted a significant increase in repo rates during the week of January 13 due to heightened liquidity demand triggered by tax payments and limited funding provided by the People’s Bank of China (PBoC).

The liquidity squeeze was most noticeable on January 16, the day following the tax payment deadline, with DR007 and R007 reaching 2.34% and 4.19%, respectively.

The PBoC maintained its stance on defending the exchange rate stability, resulting in the tightness of (RMB) liquidity being felt in the offshore market as well.

On January 9, the central bank announced it would issue RMB60 billion of 6-month bills in Hong Kong, a significant increase compared to previous issuances. The coupon rate of 3.4% was notably higher than the December issuance, reflecting the tightness of CNH liquidity and subdued demand from investors.

The December FX settlement balance by banks’ clients fell further to a deficit of US$10.5 billion, the first deficit reading since July 2024. A key change from the previous month was a sharp increase in USD demand for service trade. Reports also suggest that domestic importers have been actively purchasing USD via FX forward to hedge against tariffs risk in recent weeks, which has been exerting upward pressure on forward points.

On January 13, the PBoC increased the cross-border macroprudential parameter to 1.75 from 1.50. This move allows domestic corporations and Financial Institutions (FIs) to conduct more cross-border borrowing.

Given the widened interest rate gap between China and overseas, BofA believes this is more of a symbolic move by the PBoC to anchor market’s expectation on FX.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

Continue Reading

Trending

©2021-2024 Letizo All Rights Reserved