Dollar holds firm as growth fears stalk markets
SINGAPORE : The dollar kept trade-sensitive currencies pinned near multi-year lows on Monday and the euro was under pressure as investors sought safety due to worries about slowing global growth.
Data on Friday showed euro zone inflation surging to another record, adding to the case for the European Central Bank to hike interest rates this month.
While the common currency was steady at $1.0435 on Monday, it is barely above May’s five-year trough of $1.0349 and highlights the market’s preference for dollars as gloom clouds the outlook.
The Australian and New Zealand dollars hit two-year lows on Friday and weren’t far from those levels early in the Asia session, with the Aussie down 0.3 per cent to $0.6796, after falling to as low as $0.6764 on Friday. The kiwi slipped 0.1 per cent to $0.6197. [AUD/]
Trade is likely to be lightened ahead of the Independence Day holiday in the United States.
Safety flows tend to support the greenback, especially at the expense of trade and export-driven currencies, when the world economy is weak. This has kept the dollar elevated even as growth fears have tempered U.S. rate hike expectations.
The U.S. dollar index stood at 105.100, not far below last month’s two-decade high of 105.790. The Atlanta Federal Reserve’s much-watched GDP Now forecast has slid to an annualised -2.1 per cent for the second quarter, implying the country was already in a technical recession.
“The Aussie and other commodity currencies and even euro and sterling will likely decline even more into the week, given markets currently are super-focused on the risk of a sharp slowdown in the global economy,” said Carol Kong, a currency strategist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney.
Sterling hit a two-week low of $1.1976 on Friday and last bought $1.2095.
Ahead this week, Australia’ central bank meets on Tuesday and investors are also awaiting the publication of minutes from last month’s Federal Reserve meeting on Wednesday, and U.S. employment data on Friday.
Markets have priced in a 40 basis point (bp) hike in Australia, so the Aussie may not catch much of a boost if that is delivered.
Minutes of the Fed’s June policy meeting on Wednesday are almost certain to sound hawkish given the committee chose to hike rates by a super-sized 75 bps.
The market is pricing in around an 85 per cent chance of another hike of 75 basis points this month and rates at 3.25-3.5 per cent by year end – before cuts in 2023.
Against Asian currencies the dollar held Friday gains that lifted it to its strongest levels in years on the Thai baht, Indonesian rupiah and Singapore dollar.
The Chinese yuan began the onshore session steady at 6.7021 per dollar.
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Currency bid prices at 0135 GMT
Description RIC Last U.S. Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid
Previous Change
Session
Euro/Dollar
$1.0433 $1.0427 +0.04 per cent -8.24 per cent +1.0444 +1.0418
Dollar/Yen
134.8100 135.2700 -0.34 per cent +0.00 per cent +135.2950 +134.8150
Euro/Yen
140.63 140.99 -0.26 per cent +7.91 per cent +141.1700 +140.6300
Dollar/Swiss
0.9584 0.9596 -0.05 per cent +5.15 per cent +0.9596 +0.9583
Sterling/Dollar
1.2093 1.2095 +0.00 per cent -10.57 per cent +1.2119 +1.2095
Dollar/Canadian
1.2900 1.2883 +0.16 per cent +2.05 per cent +1.2902 +1.2876
Aussie/Dollar
0.6796 0.6817 -0.31 per cent -6.51 per cent +0.6828 +0.6796
NZ
Dollar/Dollar 0.6197 0.6205 -0.13 per cent -9.46 per cent +0.6217 +0.6197
All spots
Tokyo spots
Europe spots
Volatilities
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