Traders Await Policy Decisions as Dollar Remains at 15-Month Low

Traders Await Policy Decisions as Dollar Remains at 15-Month Low

LONDON/SYDNEY, July 17​ (Reuters) – The ⁣dollar⁤ edged lower on⁢ Monday ⁣against a⁢ basket​ of⁤ currencies ⁤after‍ suffering its⁣ biggest weekly drop of the year as traders‌ waited on ⁣economic data ‍and⁤ policy decisions before selling it down any further.

The ⁤euro ⁢continued climbing, rising 0.15%⁢ to hit⁢ a‌ fresh⁢ 16-month ⁤high at $1.12440. Versus⁤ the yen the ‌dollar fell 0.27% to 138.38 ‌yen⁢ per dollar, after touching on Friday⁤ its lowest against the​ Japanese ⁤currency in two months.

“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,” said‍ Francesco Pesole, FX strategist at ING.

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

Last week’s ​U.S. ​inflation data‍ fuelled investors’ bets that the ‌Federal Reserve ⁢was close to the end of its ⁤rate ​hike cycle, and‍ the dollar index ​had ​its biggest weekly decline since ⁤November ⁤2022, falling 2.25% on the ⁢week.

U.S.‌ producer​ prices barely rose ‍in ‍June and the annual increase in ⁣producer ‌inflation was⁣ the⁣ smallest in nearly three years, data showed on ⁣Thursday, a day⁤ after data ‍showed⁣ consumer prices rose modestly‍ last ​month.

Hikes are ⁤expected from the Fed and ⁢European​ Central‍ Bank next week, but​ beyond ⁣that market ⁣pricing implies the Fed will likely stop,⁣ before⁢ cuts⁢ next year, while in Europe ⁤another hike probably⁢ beckons. ,”The FX market is front running possible normalisation‌ of Fed policy in 2024,”⁢ said Chris Weston, head of ‍research at ⁢broker Pepperstone in Melbourne.

“The ‌question then is whether ‍the dollar ⁢sell-off​ has ⁤gone too far and⁤ we⁤ are at risk of mean reversion early⁣ this ⁤week.”

The U.S. dollar index⁢ fell 0.13% to 99.831.

CHINESE DATA

Elsewhere, ​Chinese ‌growth ​data‍ landed a little above low expectations on ⁣Monday, ‍but without ‌sparking much currency market response as ‌traders had already priced in⁣ a sluggish quarter ‌and are waiting to ‌see if ⁤the government steps⁤ up stimulus to promote​ spending.

The Australian and New ⁤Zealand ⁣dollars‍ pulled⁢ back, with the Aussie last down⁤ 0.34% at $0.6815⁢ – off last week’s peak of ​$0.6895‌ – and the kiwi down 0.4% at ‍$0.6345 ‌after hitting a five-month high​ of $0.6412‍ on‍ Friday.

“The data suggests that China’s post-COVID boom is‍ clearly over,” Commonwealth Bank of Australia strategist ⁣Carol Kong said. “But⁣ markets already ‌had low ​expectations, and​ reaction from here is​ fairly⁢ limited.”

Sharp gains‌ in ‌the yen have ‍slowed as traders⁣ weigh whether the‍ ultra-dovish Bank of Japan‍ is really ⁣likely ‌to⁣ make any‍ shifts‍ at​ its ⁤policy meeting next week, given rhetoric suggests they ​are in ‌no hurry.

The Swedish ‍and Norwegian crowns continued to climb⁢ after making gains of ​more⁢ than ​5% on ‍the dollar‍ last week.‌ The⁢ Swedish crown rose ⁤0.65% ‍to 10.1860 against the dollar, ​the‍ Norwegian crown⁤ rose‌ instead ⁣0.4% to 10.0180.

At $1.3094 sterling was parked just below last week’s 15-month…

Source​ from ‌www.reuters.com

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