NEW YORK: The US dollar edged higher against the euro after data showed US housing starts surged, while the Australian dollar fell after its latest central bank meeting minutes showed keeping interest rates unchanged had been under consideration.
US single-family homebuilding jumped in May to its highest in more than a year and permits issued for future construction also climbed, suggesting the housing market may be turning a corner after getting clobbered by Federal Reserve interest rate hikes.
The housing market has taken the biggest hit from the Fed’s fastest monetary policy tightening campaign since the 1980s, but recent data have suggested the worst may have passed.
“It was a big increase in the numbers today, and I think the takeaway is that the market may be paying a bit more heed to the FOMC’s warning this month that interest rates will likely need to be hiked further,” said Stuart Cole, chief macro economist at Equiti Capital.
The euro slipped 0.15% to $1.0905 against the greenback after having risen as high as 1.0946 earlier in the session.
Against a basket of six major currencies, the dollar was up 0.22% on the day.
Traders will be paying attention to Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s semiannual monetary policy testimony before the US House of Representatives’ Financial Affairs Committee on Wednesday.
“If Mr. Powell remains adamant that the central bank is not done raising interest rates to crush inflation, that could help the dollar stabilize after the big declines we saw last week,” said Joe Manimbo, senior market analyst at Convera.
The Australian dollar was 1.31% lower at $0.676 after minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) latest policy meeting showed the RBA’s decision to raise interest rates in June was “finely balanced.” “The minutes cast some doubt on the outlook for higher rates going forward, so that has weighed on the Aussie dollar,” Manimbo said.
The yuan slipped towards a seven-month low on Tuesday after China lowered its one-year and five-year loan prime rates (LPR) by 10 basis points, the first such easing in 10 months as authorities seek to shore up a slowing economic recovery.
The decision knocked the yuan lower, with the onshore yuan finishing the domestic session at 7.1744 per dollar, the weakest such close since Nov. 28. The offshore yuan was down 0.3% at 7.188 per dollar, languishing near last week’s trough of 7.1916.
“Chinese authorities are concerned about weak growth but are wary about re-inflating the property bubble, so expectations of large stimulus to the property sector might not be met,” said ING global head of markets Chris Turner.
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