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Forex

Dollar steadies after biggest weekly loss this year

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Dollar steadies after biggest weekly loss this year
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: U.S. dollar banknotes are displayed in this illustration taken, February 14, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

By Karen Brettell

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The dollar edged higher against a basket of currencies on Monday after last week suffering its largest weekly decline this year as Treasury yields tumbled.

This week is likely to see the dollar consolidate as investors wait on the Federal Reserve’s meeting next week, when the U.S. central bank is expected to hike rates by an additional 25 basis points.

The pace of last week’s dollar decline “seemed unusually large,” said Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex in New York, noting that the market should steady and see a firmer dollar this week.

This week’s main U.S. economic focus will be the retail sales report for June on Tuesday, though the data is unlikely to sway the path of monetary policy.

Fed funds futures traders are pricing in an additional 33 basis points of tightening this year, with the benchmark rate expected to peak at 5.40% in November. That implies that the market sees a low chance of further interest rate increases after the Fed’s July 25-26 meeting.

U.S. Treasury yields fell sharply last week as slowing consumer and producer price inflation in June increased expectations that prices pressures will continue to moderate, and in turn lead to more dovish monetary policy.

“Last week’s U.S. disinflation shock altered the FX landscape, but a few days without key data releases will tell us whether that impulse can keep the dollar on the back foot as the FOMC risk event draws nearer,” Francesco Pesole, FX strategist at ING, said.

“Euro/dollar appears a bit overstretched in the short term and could face a correction this week,” he added.

The was last up 0.03% at 99.979, after falling to 99.574 on Friday, the lowest since April 2022.

The euro was little changed on the day at $1.1225, after earlier reaching $1.12445, the highest since February 2022.

In Germany, the Bundesbank said on Monday the euro zone’s largest economy may shrink this year by more than the 0.3% decline expected only a few weeks ago, despite a small bounce in the second quarter.

Industry-heavy Germany is bearing the brunt of a drop in global demand for goods – the result of higher borrowing costs dampening investment and people spending more on leisure, travel and other services in the aftermath of the pandemic.

The European Central Bank is also expected to raise interest rates by 25 basis points next week.

The dollar gained 0.23% against the Japanese yen to 139.06, after dropping to 137.245 on Friday, the lowest since May 17.

The British pound fell 0.09% to $1.3077, after hitting $1.31440 on Thursday, the highest since April 2022.

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Currency bid prices at 10:03AM (1403 GMT)

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

Previous Change

Session

Dollar index 99.9790 99.9600 +0.03% -3.393% +100.1800 +99.7510

Euro/Dollar $1.1225 $1.1227 -0.01% +0.00% +$1.1249 +$1.1205

Dollar/Yen 139.0600 138.7500 +0.23% +0.00% +139.4000 +137.9900

Euro/Yen 156.10 155.83 +0.17% +0.00% +156.2900 +155.1100

Dollar/Swiss 0.8605 0.8621 -0.16% +0.00% +0.8630 +0.8580

Sterling/Dollar $1.3077 $1.3090 -0.09% +0.00% +$1.3109 +$1.3051

Dollar/Canadian 1.3187 1.3217 -0.22% +0.00% +1.3232 +1.3187

Aussie/Dollar $0.6812 $0.6839 -0.37% +0.00% +$0.6845 +$0.6788

Euro/Swiss 0.9658 0.9678 -0.21% +0.00% +0.9683 +0.9644

Euro/Sterling 0.8581 0.8574 +0.08% +0.00% +0.8598 +0.8572

NZ $0.6325 $0.6369 -0.70% +0.00% +$0.6368 +$0.6309

Dollar/Dollar

Dollar/Norway 10.0490 10.0570 +0.22% +0.00% +10.0890 +10.0000

Euro/Norway 11.2828 11.2754 +0.07% +0.00% +11.3165 +11.2354

Dollar/Sweden 10.2610 10.2300 +0.14% +0.00% +10.2875 +10.1756

Euro/Sweden 11.5141 11.4983 +0.14% +0.00% +11.5385 +11.4412

Forex

Asia FX rises as rate cut dents dollar; yen firms as BOJ holds course

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Investing.com– Most Asian currencies firmed on Friday, while the dollar nursed losses after the Federal Reserve cut rates by a wide margin and kicked off an easing cycle. 

The Japanese yen was among the better performers, strengthening after the Bank of Japan held interest rates and said it expected steady increases in inflation and economic growth.

The Chinese yuan also firmed after the People’s Bank of China kept its benchmark rates unchanged, ducking some expectations that it would cut rates to further support the economy. 

Yen firm as BOJ holds rates, flags higher inflation 

The Japanese yen firmed on Friday, with the pair falling 0.2% to 142.28 yen.

The BOJ in a unanimous decision, and said it expected inflation and economic growth to steadily increase.

While the central bank did not provide any overtly hawkish cues, its forecast of higher inflation tied into expectations that the BOJ will raise interest rates further. A slew of policymakers had signaled that rates will rise further in the coming months, especially as inflation picks up. 

The BOJ decision and forecast came just hours after data showed inflation rose to a 10-month high in August, as increased wages pushed up private consumption. 

While the yen was nursing weekly losses, it still remained close to its strongest levels for 2024, hit earlier in the week. Expectations of higher interest rates are likely to underpin the yen in the coming months. 

Dollar weak after rate cut cheer offsets less dovish Fed signals

The and both fell slightly in Asian trade, extending overnight declines as markets looked to lower U.S. interest rates.

The Fed and announced the start of an easing cycle, which could see rates fall by as much as 125 bps by the year-end. 

But Fed Chair Powell offered a less dovish outlook for medium-to-long term rates, stating that the central bank’s neutral rate will be much higher than seen in the past. His comments limited overall losses in the dollar, and had also seen the greenback appreciate in the immediate aftermath of the Fed decision on Wednesday.

Chinese yuan at 16-mth high as PBOC holds rates 

The Chinese yuan firmed on Friday, with the pair falling 0.3% to its lowest level since May 2023. 

Strength in the yuan came as the PBOC kept its benchmark steady, ducking some expectations that it would cut rates further to stimulate the economy. 

The PBOC’s decision came even as a raft of recent economic indicators showed sustained weakness in China.

But media reports said the PBOC was instructing local banks to buy dollars and limit overall strength in the yuan, given that a stronger yuan also weighs on Chinese exports. 

Broader Asian currencies firmed after the Fed’s decision. The Australian dollar’s pair rose 0.2% and was close to an eight-month high.

The South Korean won’s pair was an outlier, rising 0.2%, while the Singapore dollar’s pair fell 0.1%.

The Indian rupee’s pair fell 0.1%, pulling back further from record highs hit earlier this year.

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Stay long on the yen amid rate hikes, improving growth- BCA

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Investing.com– BCA Research said bets on a stronger Japanese yen were becoming more entrenched amid attractive valuations in local assets, the prospect of more interest rate hikes and an improving Japanese economy. 

The yen saw a stellar recovery over the past two months, as a hawkish Bank of Japan, a weaker dollar and an unwinding carry trade pushed the currency to 2024 peaks. The pair had fallen as low as 139 yen in recent weeks. 

BCA Research said in a recent note that the yen was a “high-conviction” buy, and that interest rates and global economic conditions were likely to favor the currency in the coming months. 

BCA expects the BOJ to this week. But a “dovish hold” is an opportunity to accumulate more yen, while an unexpected rate hike is set to further boost the currency.

The research firm said the Japanese economy remained resilient, with increases in local wages helping spruce up private consumption. 

With the Federal Reserve beginning an easing cycle, and with the BOJ likely to hike interest rates further, BCA sees interest rate differentials still moving in favor of the yen in the long term- more so if the global economy enters a recession. 

BCA expects Japanese inflation to rise further in the coming months, tieing into the BOJ’s forecasts and giving the central bank more headroom to raise interest rates. The central bank hiked rates twice so far this year, ending years of easy monetary policy on expectations of an uptick in private consumption and inflation.

While the BOJ is expected to keep rates on hold in the near-term, especially with a looming leadership change in the Japanese government, it is still expected to keep raising rates by end-2024 and going into 2025. BCA said an interest rate hike will “not hurt Japan.” 

On Japanese equities, however, BCA was less enthusiastic, rating them as “structurally neutral.” The firm cited yen strength as a headwind, and saw no immediate positive developments in ongoing corporate governance and structural reforms.

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Dollar slips in choppy trading as traders grapple with Fed’s giant rate cut

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(Adds missing “cuts” in first bullet, no other changes to text)

By Chibuike Oguh and Stefano Rebaudo

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. dollar slipped in choppy trading on Wednesday as markets grappled with the supersized 50 basis point interest rate cut, as well as the switch to an easing monetary policy stance delivered by the Federal Reserve.

Investor expectations had largely shifted towards a dovish outcome in the days leading up to the Fed’s move on Wednesday, with money markets pricing in around a 65% chance of a 50 basis point (bp) cut. But economists polled by Reuters were leaning towards a 25 bp cut.

“The interesting thing is the half point cut, which was pretty much unexpected or at least only half and half yesterday, has not really given the dollar extra damage – which is quite surprising,” said Joseph Trevisani, senior analyst at FXStreet in New York.

The , which measures the greenback against a basket of six peers, was down 0.38% to 100.64 after reversing gains made in early trading. It slid to its lowest in more than a year of 100.21 in the previous session.

The euro strengthened 0.4% to $1.1163. Against the yen, the dollar was 0.33% higher at 142.73 as markets anticipate that the Bank of Japan will leave interest rates unchanged on Friday.

The dollar weakened 0.08% to 0.847 against the Swiss franc and dropped 0.34% to 7.070 versus the offshore .

“What it’s really doing I think is giving permission, if you will, for the other central banks around the world, some of whom have started to cut rates already, to go further with their rate cuts,” Trevisani said.

Money markets priced in 72 bps of additional rate cuts in 2024 and 192 bps by September 2025.

The U.S. Treasury yield curve, which measures the gap between yields on two- and and seen as an indicator of economic expectations, steepened and hit its highest since June 2022. It was last at a positive 13.4 basis points, indicating more upcoming rate cuts.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits dropped unexpectedly to 12,000 last week, according to Labor Department data on Thursday, suggesting labor market growth.

Fed policymakers on Wednesday projected the benchmark interest rate would fall by another half of a percentage point by the end of this year, a full percentage point next year and half of a percentage point in 2026.

“The initial interpretation of the decision was that it was dovish and while it was basically even odds that it was going to happen, overall, on the surface, it’s still a dovish move,” said Eugene Epstein, head of trading & structured products North America at Moneycorp in Boston.

“Everything reversed basically by the end of the day, so you can make the argument as a bit of buy the rumour, sell the fact. A lot of dovishness was already priced in.”

The pound hit its highest since March 2022 versus the dollar after the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted 8-1 to keep rates on hold. Sterling was up 0.5% against the greenback at $1.3278 after reaching as high as $1.3314.

The Australian and New Zealand dollars drew support from domestic data surprises. Australian employment exceeded forecasts for a third straight month in August.

The was up 0.77% to $0.6815.

The , meanwhile, traded 0.58% higher at $0.6244, after data showed the New Zealand economy contracted by 0.2% in the second quarter.

Currency bid prices at 19              

September​ 07:17 p.m. GMT

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

Dollar index 100.62 101.02 -0.39% -0.74% 101.47 100.51

Euro/Dollar 1.1162 1.1118 0.4% 1.13% $1.1179 $1.1069

Dollar/Yen 142.61 142.3 0.22% 1.11% 143.875 141.885

Euro/Yen 1.1162​ 158.18 0.64% 2.29% 159.96 157.79

Dollar/Swiss 0.8469 0.8463 0.06% 0.62% 0.8515 0.845

Sterling/Dollar 1.3276 1.3214 0.51% 4.37% $1.3314 $1.3155​

Dollar/Canadian 1.3559 1.3606 -0.34% 2.29% 1.3648 1.3534

Aussie/Dollar 0.6812 0.6764 0.73% -0.07% $0.6839 $0.6738

Euro/Swiss 0.945 0.9408 0.47% 1.79% 0.9465 0.9406

Euro/Sterling 0.8406 0.8414 -0.1% -3.02% 0.8423 0.8392

NZ Dollar/Dollar 0.6243 0.6208 0.65% -1.12% $0.6269 0.6183

Dollar/Norway 10.4931​ 10.5877 -0.89% 3.53% 10.6504 10.4394

Euro/Norway 11.7134 11.7726 -0.5% 4.36% 11.7929 11.6517

Dollar/Sweden 10.1611 10.2057 -0.44% 0.93% 10.2535 10.1143

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Woman holds U.S. dollar banknotes in this illustration taken May 30, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Euro/Sweden 11.3423 11.3478 -0.05% 1.95% 11.3597 11.2923

(This story has been refiled to add the missing word ‘cuts’ in the first bullet)

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