The dollar index slipped on Friday, putting it on track to fall for a fifth week, the longest stretch of declines in four years, as disappointing data on domestic factory activity and consumer sentiment stirred doubts about the US economic growth. Earlier, this measure of the greenback against a group of currencies including the euro and yen bounced from a four-month low as buying emerged with lower European bond yields, and as traders booked profits on this week's gains in other currencies against the greenback.
"The dollar is oversold. The data weren't all that great, but the story is people still see the Federal Reserve raising interest rates later this year," said Kathy Lien, managing director at BK Asset Management in New York. The euro was up 0.2 percent to $1.1431, a tad below a three-month high of $1.1445 on Thursday and about 9 percent higher than a 12-year low of $1.0457 reached on March 16. That was the day the European Central Bank embarked on its 1.1 trillion euro bond-buying program, to which President Mario Draghi reiterated his commitment on Thursday.
Against the yen, the dollar was up 0.1 percent at 119.24 yen, shaving its weekly loss to 0.5 percent. The sterling was little changed at $1.5781, leaving it with a weekly gain of 2.1 percent. The Aussie dollar fell 0.4 percent to $0.8044 after hitting a near four-month high of $0.8164 on Thursday.
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