The dollar climbed across the board on Tuesday as financial markets re-opened after the Easter holiday and traders favoured the greenback ahead of the release on Friday of US gross domestic product data for the first three months of 2019. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against six currencies, rose 0.47% to 97.74, its highest since June 2017. The euro fell 0.52% against the dollar, slipping below the $1.12 handle for the first time in nearly three weeks.
The dollar was supported by data on Tuesday that showed sales of new US single-family homes jumped to a near 1-1/2-year high in March. The data follows recent positive news on retail sales and exports which have eased concerns of a sharply slowing US economy, analysts said. "Today is certainly a good dollar day," said Minh Trang, senior currency trader at Silicon Valley Bank in Santa Clara, California.
"The dollar is coming in full force and we have seen somewhat of a lower trend on the euro overall," he said. An uptick this week in oil prices on news of US plans to tighten a clamp down on Iranian oil exports from next month is also a positive for the dollar, said Silicon Valley Bank's Trang.
"If we do see a follow-through from higher oil prices to a little bit higher inflation I think you will see the Fed be in a position to be more stable with maintaining rates and eliminating any kind of conversation about rate cuts," he said.
Sterling slid to a two-month low on Tuesday as hopes for a breakthrough in Brexit talks between the ruling and opposition parties faded and British Prime Minister Theresa May faced growing pressure to quit. The Canadian dollar weakened to a nearly four-week low against its US counterpart on Tuesday as investors awaited a Bank of Canada interest rate decision on Wednesday.
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