LONDON: The euro inched back towards the previous session’s one-month high on Wednesday as a higher-than-expected inflation reading pumped up bond yields, forcing investors to cover their bearish bets on the single currency.
Strong institutional demand at bond auctions from Greece and Germany also underpinned the euro’s gains.
Data on Tuesday showed euro zone inflation increased to 3% year-on-year in August, the highest in a decade, above the European Central Bank’s 2% target and a 2.7% forecast in a Reuters poll.
The reading sent yields on German benchmark debt to their highest levels since late July.
The jump in bond yields forced traders to halt their multi-month streak of U.S. dollar purchases versus the euro.
Net short bets against the greenback versus the single currency have fallen to their lowest levels since March 2020, according to the latest positioning data.
Implied volatility gauges on the single currency also flickered to life, with one-month maturities rising to their highest levels since early July as expectations grew that the ECB might signal a policy shift at a meeting next week.
Robert Holzmann, governor of Austria’s central bank, said the ECB was in a situation where it could think about reducing emergency bond purchases, and that he expected the issue to be discussed at the meeting.
But despite the hawkish comments and the data, the single currency failed to make much progress above the $1.18 level. In London trading, the euro inched 0.1% higher to $1.1822, below an Aug. 5 high of $1.1842 hit on Tuesday following the data.
Analysts believe the lack of sustained euro strength is based on current ECB forward guidance that suggests asset purchases will continue until rate hikes are necessary, indicating the stimulus program might be expanded next year.
Elsewhere the dollar was marginally higher versus its rivals, thanks to a mix of weak Asian factory activity data and firmer U.S. Treasury yields. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against six rivals, was broadly steady around 92.63 from Tuesday, when it dipped as low as 92.395 for the first time since Aug. 6.
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