Dollar retreats as rate hike bets ease
A modest rebound in investors’ appetite for riskier assets also dented demand for the safe haven currency.
Federal Reserve officials signalled Friday they will likely stick with a 75-basis-point interest rate increase at their July 26-27 meeting, though a recent high inflation reading could still warrant larger increases than anticipated later in the year.
Traders in futures contracts tied to the Fed’s short-term federal funds policy rate, who had been leaning toward a full-percentage-point rise in interest rates, shifted their bets firmly in favor of a 0.75-percentage-point increase at the upcoming meeting.
“(It’s) a clear reversal of that pricing from last week after the UMich 5-year inflation expectation figure faded, and after (Fed governor Christopher) Waller cast significant doubt on a larger hike,” said Michael Brown, head of market intelligence at Caxton in London.
On Friday, the University of Michigan’s preliminary survey of consumers for July showed consumers see inflation running at 2.8% over a five-year horizon, the lowest in a year and down from 3.1% in June.
On Thursday, Fed governor Waller said he supports another 75-basis-point interest rate increase this month, prompting a paring of bets on a 100-basis-point rate hike which had grown after a Labor Department report on Wednesday showed consumer prices rose at an annual 9.1% pace in June.
Against a basket of currencies, the dollar was 0.51% lower at 107.29. The index closed at a two-decade high of 108.65 on Thursday.
Some of Monday’s dollar weakness likely reflects profit-taking after its strong rally, Brown said.
Still, investors largely remain hesitant to turn bearish on the greenback.
The euro, which has come under selling pressure in recent sessions due to uncertainty about a potential energy supply crunch in the euro zone, pared gains after a Reuters report that Russia’s Gazprom has declared force majeure on gas supplies to Europe to at least one major customer.
The euro was last up 0.65% at $1.01545.
The New Zealand dollar was 0.28% higher after an alarmingly high reading on inflation stoked speculation of more aggressive rate hikes, pushing up bond yields.
The Australian dollar, seen as a liquid proxy for risk appetite, was 0.68% higher. Commodity-linked currencies also got a boost after Chinese authorities flagged support for the property sector, lifting iron ore and copper prices
The broad weakness in the dollar helped lift the British pound 1.07% to $1.19975, but the UK currency’s rally was capped by political risks and
recession fears in Britain.
In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin rose 5.95% to $22,164.95, extending its recovery from a weeks-long selloff that took it below the $20,000 level.
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