Dollar wavers as traders turn to payrolls
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SYDNEY — The dollar wobbled in a choppy
Asia session on Thursday, as investors looked ahead to U.S.
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labor and inflation data where softness may signal an eventual
slowdown in U.S. rate hikes.
After surging on Wednesday, the greenback struggled to hold
the gains and fell 0.4% to $0.9922 per euro and 0.3%
against sterling.
The risk-sensitive Australian and New Zealand dollars gained
more than 0.5% to lift the Aussie over $0.65 and the kiwi to a
two week high above $0.58.
U.S. jobs data is due on Friday and inflation figures next
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week. Federal Reserve officials have repeatedly stressed they
will hike and hold rates high until inflation subsides, and
markets expect a steep 75 basis point hike next month.
However, an unexpectedly modest 25 basis point hike in
Australia this week raised hopes other central banks may temper
their tightening soon too.
“People are kind of anticipating the Fed could do
likewise, but obviously the Fed is pushing back against this
idea,” said Bank of Singapore analyst Moh Siong Sim.
“It’s a bit of a positioning adjustment rather than a big
reassessment of the fundamentals,” he said. “It really depends
on the data (and) any hint that things might slow down in the
U.S. – the market will latch on to that.”
No such data nor hints from the Fed were in evidence on
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Wednesday, when the dollar lifted sharply.
The U.S. services industry posted another month of expansion
in September, while labor market figures were solid and the
trade deficit narrowed.
San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly reiterated
policymakers’ focus on inflation fighting and dismissed market
hopes for rate cuts in 2023.
“I think that just reminded people that you might be a bit
premature in trying to price in rate cuts in the U.S.,” said
Westpac currency strategist Imre Speizer.
Interest rate futures imply more than 130 basis
points of tightening ahead for the Fed before the middle of next
year.
The U.S. dollar index wobbled 0.08% lower to 110.84,
off lows near 110 from earlier in the week, though some distance
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below last week’s 20-year high of 114.78.
Sterling last bought $1.1351, while the Australian
dollar was up 0.6% to $0.6528. The New Zealand dollar
, riding an additional boost from a resolutely hawkish
central bank hike on Wednesday, made a two-week peak of $0.5810.
The yen, which has been held steady by the risk of
further Japanese intervention, sat at 144.51 per dollar.
The Saudi Arabia-led cartel of oil producers agreed to steep
production cuts on Wednesday, lifting Brent crude futures
to a three-week high of $93.99 a barrel.
Analysts said higher prices would probably reduce the
chances of rate cuts any time soon and hit hardest for Europe
and Britain.
“Higher energy prices would have a much more direct impact
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on the European region given the more direct relationship to
their finances,” said NatWest Markets’ strategist Jan Nevruzi.
Later on Thursday the European Central Bank releases minutes
from last month’s policy meeting.
========================================================
Currency bid prices at 0600 GMT
Description RIC Last U.S. Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid
Previous Change
Session
Euro/Dollar
$0.9920 $0.9886 +0.37% -12.72% +0.9927 +0.9881
Dollar/Yen
144.4900 144.5450 +0.02% +25.70% +144.6900 +144.4150
Euro/Yen
Dollar/Swiss
0.9805 0.9830 -0.25% +7.49% +0.9830 +0.9800
Sterling/Dollar
1.1349 1.1319 +0.32% -16.04% +1.1383 +1.1302
Dollar/Canadian
1.3579 1.3617 -0.28% +7.39% +1.3620 +1.3565
Aussie/Dollar
0.6526 0.6491 +0.58% -10.19% +0.6541 +0.6488
NZ
Dollar/Dollar 0.5790 0.5746 +0.81% -15.38% +0.5813 +0.5740
All spots
Tokyo spots
Europe spots
Volatilities
Tokyo Forex market info from BOJ
(Reporting by Tom Westbrook.
Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Lincoln Feast)
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